in the ensuing pages, his work also has been determinative of my own thinking on this topic. As I told him, for many years I had taped to my computer screen a quote from him that also ultimately served as an epigraph for my paper "The Pasts": "We choose our past in the same way that we choose our future." What I often imagine myself to be doing is offering an account of why I take this to be correct by reformulating his insights as a conclusion of a type of philosophical argument.Regarding then Danto, Mink, and White, much of this book consists in efforts to knit together insights gleaned from each within an epistemological perspective forged by my readings of W. V. O. Quine and T. S. Kuhn. This allows me to answer questions regarding historical explanation debated since the nineteenth century (see Patton 2015; Dewulf 2017b).A key portion of this book originated from an invitation to develop my views by Mary Morgan and Norton Wise. I received helpful challenges and intellectual impetus as well from conversations with and questions by John Beatty and Ken Waters. As a consequence of their questions I briefly venture to discuss in chapter 4 narratives in science. However, it remained a primary goal for me to address how narrative explanation, and so histories as a form of empirical inquiry, relate to disciplines unproblematically taken to be sciences.At the very beginning of my efforts to weld some three decades of writings into a unified line of thought, Lisa Clark provided invaluable assistance, and to her I owe an immense debt. She diligently worked through a very rough early version of my manuscript with patience, intelligence, and insight. Without her editorial help and extensive suggestions, I doubt that I would have found the project doable. I can list names of only some of the many people whose feedback on one part or another of this project over the years has been of importance to me: