Abstract This article elaborates and defends philosophical microhistory—the intensive study of small episodes such as quotes, marginal anecdotes, editorial decisions, or forgotten glosses—as an undertheorised approach to the historiography of philosophy. Adapting Italian microhistory, it treats ideas as semantic capital circulating through networks of thinkers, translators, and institutions. The article presents a framework centred on levels of abstraction, showing how microscopic and macroscopic scales function as complementary perspectives. It contextualises philosophical microhistory relative to Lovejoy's history of ideas, rational reconstruction, Cambridge contextualism, Begriffsgeschichte , reception history, and Foucauldian genealogy, arguing that the approach supplements rather than supplants existing methods. It addresses objections concerning antiquarianism, representativeness, and the micro–macro problem, concluding that digital humanities and global intellectual history present new opportunities. Philosophical microhistory emerges as a methodology valuing contingency, foregrounding marginal voices, and disclosing how philosophy's most significant topics may sometimes be shaped by its most minor details.
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Luciano Floridi
Metaphilosophy
Yale University
University of Bologna
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Luciano Floridi (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e7143fcb99343efc98dadf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/meta.70033