b. Internal criticism—investigation of the content of sources. What did the author mean? Are his statements true?
c. The need of historical criticism finds daily illustration in the schoolroom, in ordinary conversation, in the newspapers.
d. Historical criticism first formally applied by the Greeks. Not fully developed until modern times.
4. Historical Synthesis—putting the Facts together into a Body of Organized Knowledge.
a. The chronological order—facts arranged according to time of occurrence.
b. The geographical order—facts arranged according to place of occurrence.
c. The logical order—facts arranged according to their intrinsic nature.
d. One order used exclusively.
5. History as an Account or Narrative.
a. The subject embraced.