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Theory and the history of cartography
Authors:Matthew H Edney
Institution:Associate Professor of Geography/Anthropology and of American and New England Studies, and Faculty Scholar, Osher Library , University of Southern Maine , USA
Abstract:Abstract

Cartographic history has been dominated by an empiricism that treats the nature of maps as self‐evident and which denies the presence of any theory. In contrast, this paper argues that theories lie at the root of all empirical study whether or not they are acknowledged. The linear, progressive model of cartographic development, for example, is not a law deduced from historical evidence; if it were it would be easily and quickly dismissed. It derives instead from our cultural beliefs concerning the nature of maps, which is to say from our unexamined theories. Historians of cartography need to be critical of their assumptions and preconceptions. Theoretical discussions in the history of cartography must address not whether we should use theory at all but to which theories we should adhere. It is inadequate simply to knock theories down. We must establish a debate in which old understandings of maps, of their creation, and of their use are replaced by better (that is, more consistent and coherent) theories.
Keywords:Theory in the history of cartography  empiricism  naturalised maps  Michel Foucault  J  B  Harley
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