Finding Philosophy in Social Science

Front Cover
Yale University Press, Jan 1, 1996 - Social Science - 432 pages
Written by an eminent and original thinker in the philosophy of science, this book takes a fresh, unorthodox look at the key philosophical concepts and assumptions of the social sciences. Mario Bunge contends that social scientists (anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, economists, and historians) ought not to leave philosophy to philosophers who have little expertise in or knowledge of the social sciences. Bunge urges social scientists to engage in serious philosophizing and philosophers to participate in social research. The two fields are interrelated, he says, and important advances in each can supply tools for solving problems in the other.

Bunge analyzes such concepts as fact, cause, and value that the fields of philosophy and social science share. He discusses assumptions and misassumptions involved in such current approaches as idealism, materialism, and subjectivism, and finds that none of the best-known philosophies helps to advance or even understand social science. In a highly critical appraisal of rational choice theories, Bunge insists that these models provide no solid substantive theory of society, nor do they help guide rational action. He offers ten criteria by which to evaluate philosophies of social science and proposes novel solutions to social science's methodological and philosophical problems. He argues forcefully that a particular union of rationalism, realism, and systemism is the logical and viable philosophical stance for social science practitioners.
 

Contents

Fact
15
Idea
47
Inquiry
76
Systematization
108
Explanation and Prediction
135
Empirical Operations
166
The Weight of Evidence
180
Science et al
184
Systemism
264
Idealism and Materialism
282
Intuitionism Empiricism Pragmatism and Rationalism
305
RatioEmpiricism
322
Between Reason and Fact Rational Choice Theory
359
State Space Representation
391
Futility Theory
397
Index of Subjects
427

Values and Morals
219
General Philosophy Problems in Social Science
241

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About the author (1996)

Mario Bunge is the Frothingham Professor of Logic and Metaphysics at McGill University.

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