Authors
- Vasiliev Vladimir Viktorovich PhD (History), Associate Professor
Annotation
The article analyzes the influence of political history on the specific features and characteristics of the phenomenon of social uncertainty. The article notes that one of the key characteristics of modern political history is the changing interpretation of the forms, nature and identified patterns of relationships between political subjects, which have a direct impact on the uncertain state of society. The author emphasizes that the increasing nonlinear nature of political changes in the conditions of complex modernity ambiguously determines socio-political development. It is stated that the dynamics of interpretations of political history most often occur during critical transformation periods in the development of society. In the context of analyzing changes in dominant political concepts, options for transforming the field of political history are presented, allowing us to conclude that they determine the level of uncertainty in society. The areas of political, socio-economic and cultural management, social psychology, semantics, and axiology influenced by changes in political history are considered. The objective nature of changes in historical and political issues is noted. It is concluded that political history as a factor of stability influencing the political, socio-economic, and cultural spheres of society cannot ensure a reduction in social uncertainty.
How to link insert
Vasiliev, V. V. (2023). POLITICAL HISTORY AND THE PHENOMENON OF SOCIAL UNCERTAINTY Bulletin of the Moscow City Pedagogical University. Series "Pedagogy and Psychology", 2023, №4 (48), 17. https://doi.org/10.25688/2078-9238.2023.48.4.2
References
1.
1. Zubova, O. G., & Lebedeva, I. V. (2012). Falsification of the historical past as a manipulative technology for destroying the future. Humanitarian Research, 4 (44), 237–244. (In Russian).
2.
2. Baranov, A. V. (2014). History and political science: possibilities of interdisciplinary synthesis in the study of civilizations. Method, (4), 290–299. (In Russian).
3.
3. Reznikova, N. A. (2005). Semantic analysis of political vocabulary. Bulletin of Tomsk State Pedagogical University, 4 (49), 49–54. (In Russian).
4.
4. Zhukotskaya, A. V. (2022). Ideology: phobias and expectations. MCU Journal of Philosophical Sciences, 3 (43), 17–28. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.25688/2078-9238.2022.43.3.2
5.
5. Tabachkov, A. S. (2014) Information society in the context of history. Questions of Philosophy, (10), 37–45. (In Russian).