Research Catalog
Practical Knowledge : Applying the Social Sciences
- Title
- Practical Knowledge : Applying the Social Sciences / Nico Stehr.
- Author
- Stehr, Nico.
- Publication
- London : Sage Publications, 1992.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | H61 .S835 1992g | Off-site |
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Details
- Description
- xii, 188 pages; 23 cm
- Summary
- The status of the social sciences as knowledge presents two fundamental problems. The first is epistemological: in what sense is the subject matter of the social sciences known and knowable? The second is pragmatic: can knowledge generated by the social sciences be applied, and with what consequences? In this book Nico Stehr offers a major reassessment of the latter question. From the position of confidence adopted by nineteenth-century founding figures such as Comte and Marx, most social scientists have now arrived at a much more limited view of the practical potential of social science knowledge. Nico Stehr argues that this loss of confidence stems from a partial understanding of the application of social science. In particular the current view is based on a specific model of theorizing and on an instrumental conception of the policy implications of social science.
- In the course of this reassessment Stehr examines the question of Keynesian economics: a classic case of the application of social science on a grand scale. To what extent can the political, social and economic policies pursued in Keynesian economics be related to Keynesian ideas as social science? Arguing for a reconception of the ways in which social science knowledge can be and is applied, this book will be of interest to a broad range of social scientists including social theorists, economic theorists, sociologists of knowledge, historians of the social sciences, and all those concerned with the relation of social science to public policy.
- Subject
- Contents
- 1. Knowledge as a Capacity to Act -- 2. Social Science and Practice. The self-conception of social scientists. The deficit of social science knowledge -- Excursus: The Authority of Complexity. Keynes's theory as an exemplary case -- 3. The Science of Application. The model of instrumentality. The logic of justification and the logic of practice. The convergence of intellectual traditions -- Excursus: Max Weber and the Political Virtues of Social Science Knowledge. Society, culture and science. Religion and scientific activity. The legitimacy of social scientific activity. The authority of discourse. Conclusion -- 4. Economic Policy as Applied Social Science. Politics and the economy. Knowledge for practice. Correspondence versus identity. Practical knowledge. Economic knowledge. The state as entrepreneur. The conditions for the crisis of Keynesian economic policy -- 5. Pragmatic Knowledge. Knowledge guiding interests and practice. Knowing and doing. Local knowledge and practice.
- Social and natural science knowledge in action -- Excursus: Sociology as Enlightenment. The preconditions for the rule of the new elite. Disadvantages and benefits of a pragmatic social science -- Appendix: Selected Macro-economic Trends.
- ISBN
- 0803986998 :
- LCCN
- gb 92353313
- OCLC
- ocm26354603
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries