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Clouds, Clocks, and the study of Politics
by
Almond, Gabriel A.
, Genco, Stephen J.
in
Causality
/ Determinism
/ Humans
/ International politics
/ Modeling
/ Political science
/ Psychology
/ Social psychology
/ Social sciences
/ Voting behavior
1977
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Do you wish to request the book?
Clouds, Clocks, and the study of Politics
by
Almond, Gabriel A.
, Genco, Stephen J.
in
Causality
/ Determinism
/ Humans
/ International politics
/ Modeling
/ Political science
/ Psychology
/ Social psychology
/ Social sciences
/ Voting behavior
1977
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Journal Article
Clouds, Clocks, and the study of Politics
1977
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Overview
In its eagerness to become scientific, political science has in recent decades tended to lose contact with its ontological base. It has tended to treat political events and phenomena as natural events lending themselves to the same explanatory logic as is found in physics and the other hard sciences. This tendency may be understood in part as a phase in the scientific revolution, as a diffusion, in two steps, of ontological and methodological assumptions from the strikingly successful hard sciences: first to psychology and economics, and then from these bellwether human sciences to sociology, anthropology, political science, and even history. In adopting the agenda of hard science, the social sciences, and political science in particular, were encouraged by the neopositivist school of the philosophy of science which legitimated this assumption of ontological and meta-methodological homogeneity. More recently, some philosophers of science and some psychologists and economists have had second thoughts about the applicability to human subject matters of strategy used in hard science.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press,Princeton University Press,Princeton University Press, etc
Subject
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