'Can an action have many descriptions?'?
In: Inquiry: an interdisciplinary journal of philosophy and the social sciences, Band 10, Heft 1-4, S. 447-448
ISSN: 1502-3923
9 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Inquiry: an interdisciplinary journal of philosophy and the social sciences, Band 10, Heft 1-4, S. 447-448
ISSN: 1502-3923
In: American political science review, Band 54, Heft 4, S. 944-954
ISSN: 1537-5943
An outstanding advance in one field of human endeavor will often inspire workers in others to try to transfer its conceptions or techniques into their own less successful fields, for obvious reasons. And so political theorists who have long been discontented with the state of politics when compared with that of certain other sciences have, in consequence, sought to advance their field by adopting the ideas or techniques of their scientific contemporaries. The impressive application of physics will probably increase both political tension and the political scientists' interest in methodology.The last hundred years of political science have seen attempts at the introduction of various exotica, Darwinism, Economism, Freudianism, even Statisticism; but what I shall here discuss is the centuries-old attempt to appropriate the success of dynamics or mechanics to politics, an attempt which found its first great exponent in Hobbes but which has been carried on in this century by men like Bentley and Catlin. The success of dynamics, such men seem to have thought, is evidently the result of its method, which they took to be the reduction of phenomena to the primary qualities of matter and motion. We who are interested in politics, accordingly, will do well to copy the method of the successful scientists and reduce all political phenomena to similar primary entities. Just as Newtonian physicists speak of material bodies or particles, and the forces they exert upon each other, so we must confine ourselves to the description of the motions of atomic political bodies and the forces they exert upon each other. Thus we need only speak with Hobbes of men and their desires, or with Catlin of political men and their wills, or with Bentley of groups and their pressures, in order to succeed. We know that, in the early chapters of Leviathan, Hobbes announced this as his programme; but it is doubtful whether, as he moved from methodology to political theory, he did as he said he would do and whether he had not worked out his political theory before he "deduced" it from his primary entities of matter and motion. In what follows I shall try to show a similar history in the work of A. F. Bentley and D. B. Truman. I shall try to show that Bentley announced a methodological programme and that Truman's "development" of it has been quite external and could, in fact, have been undertaken without any reference to Bentley at all. I shall try to show, that is, that Bentley's contribution to political science has been of a psychological rather than a logical kind, and that the references made to him by contemporary pressure group theorists are similar to those which a Russian physicist might make to dialectical materialism.
In: Public administration: the journal of the Australian regional groups of the Royal Institute of Public Administration, Band 19, Heft 3, S. 264-269
ISSN: 1467-8500
In: American political science review, Band 54, Heft 4, S. 944-954
ISSN: 0003-0554
The substance of A. F. Bentley's THE PROCESS OF GOVERNMENT is an appeal to pol'al sci'ts to model their methods on those of classical or Newtonian physicists. He advises us to reduce all the variables admitted into pol'al sci to one kind of entity, the group, & to reduce all the relations between those entities to one kind of relation, pressure. It is doubtful that Bentley's main theme was properly understood by himself, & it has been quite misunderstood by both his opponents & proponents, esp by D. B. Truman in his GOVERNMENTAL PROCESS. Truman is not employing Bentley's methodology, neither is he extending it, & his failure to realize this harms his otherwise sound empirical pol'al sci. This is esp clear in his remarks on the 'common interest', & it is argued that at least one conception of the common interest is consistent with both Bentley & Truman. IPSA.
In: The Australian journal of politics and history: AJPH, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 51-63
ISSN: 1467-8497
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 74, S. 102034
ISSN: 0962-6298
In: Environment and planning. A, Band 28, Heft 4, S. 753-760
ISSN: 1472-3409
In: Environment and planning. A, Band 31, Heft 10, S. 1893-1900
ISSN: 1472-3409
In: Environment and planning. A, Band 31, Heft 3, S. 559-570
ISSN: 1472-3409