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1The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences (edited book)Wiley-Blackwell. 2003._The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences _collects newly commissioned essays that examine fundamental issues in the social sciences.
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13Edward Shils began as a sociologist under the close mentorship of Louis Wirth, with whom he collaborated on the translation of Karl Mannheim’s Ideology and Utopia. After 1940, however, Shils’ career, which had been focused on topics in sociology, notably the class and occupational structure of cities and on German Sociological Theory, took an apparent turn, which in 1946 led him into a relationship with Michael Polanyi, a half-time appointment at the London School of Economics, and a new intelle…Read more
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1Michael Oakeshott employed a device of argument and analysis that appears in a number of other thinkers, where it is given the name “antinomies.” These differ from binary oppositions or contradictories in that the two poles are bound together. In this discussion, the nature of this binding is explored in detail, in large part in relation to Oakeshott’s own usages, such as his discussion of the relation of faith and skepticism, between collective goal-oriented associations and those based on cont…Read more
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9There is a large literature on social epistemology, some of which is concerned with expert knowledge. Formal representations of the aggregation of decisions, estimates, and the like play a larger role in these discussions. Yet these discussions are neither sufficiently social nor epistemic. The assumptions minimize the role of knowledge, and often assume independence between observers. This paper presents a more naturalistic approach, which appeals to a model of epistemic gain from others, as mu…Read more
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17The Significance of ShilsSociological Theory 17 (2): 125-145. 1999.Edward Shils was a widely recognized but misunderstood thinker. The original contexts of his thought are not well understood and greatly distorted by associating him with the concerns of Parsons. Shils provides a fully comparable alternative to the thought of Habermas and Foucault, with essentially similar roots: practice theory, the dissolution of Marxism in the twenties, and Carl Schmitt. Though Shils was indebted to the American sociological tradition, with respect to these issues his sources…Read more
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The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences (edited book)Wiley-Blackwell. 2008._The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences _collects newly commissioned essays that examine fundamental issues in the social sciences.
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Explaining the NormativePolity. 2013.Normativity is what gives reasons their force, makes words meaningful, and makes rules and laws binding. It is present whenever we use such terms as ‘correct,' ‘ought,' ‘must,' and the language of obligation, responsibility, and logical compulsion. Yet normativists, the philosophers committed to this idea, admit that the idea of a non-causal normative realm and a body of normative objects is spooky. Explaining the Normative is the first systematic, historically grounded critique of normativism. …Read more
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18The tradition of post-traditionIn Herman Paul & Adriaan van Veldhuizen (eds.), Post-everything: An intellectual history of post-concepts, Manchester University Press. pp. 172-192. 2021.The idea of a break with tradition and its wholesale replacement with something else – most often some Enlightenment-inspired notion of the rational – is so pervasive in Western thought that it arguably constitutes a tradition in its own right. Yet recent uses of the term ‘post-traditional’ promise something novel: they radicalize the term’s meaning. Thus, ‘post-traditional’ increasingly implies not simply a break with a particular tradition, but rather a break with tradition as such. These new,…Read more
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27Book Review: Ungoverning: The Attack on the Administrative State and the Politics of Chaos, by Russell Muirhead and Nancy L. Rosenblum Ungoverning: The Attack on the Administrative State and the Politics of Chaos, by MuirheadRussellRosenblumNancy L., Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2024, 280 pp (review)Political Theory 53 (5): 739-743. 2025.
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24The Young ShilsTradition and Discovery 39 (3): 43-51. 2012.Edward Shils began as a sociologist under the close mentorship of Louis Wirth, with whom he collaborated on the translation of Karl Mannheim’s Ideology and Utopia. After 1940, however, Shils’ career, which had been focused on topics in sociology, notably the class and occupational structure of cities and on German Sociological Theory, took an apparent turn, which in 1946 led him into a relationship with Michael Polanyi, a half-time appointment at the London School of Economics, and a new intelle…Read more
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27Weber’s Countergenealogy of DemocracyIn Joshua Derman & Peter Eli Gordon (eds.), Max Weber at 100: legacies and prospects, Oxford University Press. 2025.Weber’s comments on democracy are puzzling, and even more puzzling when they are reinterpreted in terms of what came to be called “democratic theory” in academic circles. The list of puzzling statements is long, involving such notions as nonlegitimate domination. The distinction he made between democracy and authority—which he took to be mutually incompatible concepts in their pure forms—excludes the possibility of legitimate democratic authority. The reasoning is comparable to similar claims by…Read more
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22What about Democracy?In Joshua Derman & Peter Eli Gordon (eds.), Max Weber at 100: legacies and prospects, Oxford University Press. 2025.Democracy is not a central concept in Max Weber’s academic work. As a liberal citizen, Weber campaigned in 1918/1919 for equal suffrage and a parliamentary democracy with a plebiscitary “leader.” This contribution attempts to systematically grasp Weber’s concept of democracy on the basis of four narratives. Weber’s approach is sociological: democratization is a dynamic social process that interacts with the development of political equality for citizens. Ideal typically, “democracy” means self-g…Read more
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57Tacit Coercion: A ReplyEpistemology and Philosophy of Science 61 (3): 93-104. 2024.In this reply to comments by Schliesser, Kochin, Kositna, Sassower, Miller, and Eyal and Sheremet, the underlying thesis of “Epistemic Coercion” is elaborated and explained. Epistemic Coercion is often thought to be impossible: no one can coerce belief. This is the thesis of epistemic voluntarism. But the techniques and responses the paper addressed were different: they were attempts to alter the epistemic environment. And this relates to the tacit. Voluntarism does not hold for the tacit, which…Read more
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48Epistemic CoercionEpistemology and Philosophy of Science 61 (3): 21-38. 2024.Recent developments in social epistemology have applied a radically expansive notion of harm which encompasses beliefs and kinds of scientific knowledge. The implied or explicit implication of these notions is that these harms need to be suppressed. The notion of disinformation has turned this into institutional practice. The Covid pandemic saw the development and widespread use of actual means of knowledge suppression and epistemic engineering, both within science and with respect to expert cla…Read more
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20Mad Hazard: A life in social theoryEmerald. 2022.Revealing an academic career not dependent on prestige and academic power, but also not untouched by hierarchy and academic politics, Mad Hazard is appealing for readers interested in the field of social theory, and beyond that, those interested in the evolution of intellectual life in the present university.
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22Collaboration as a Window on What Science Has ComeZagadnienia Naukoznawstwa 56 (1). 2024.Agnieszka Olechnicka et al. have nicely documented developments in the internationalization of science and collaboration which raise important broader question. The traditional view, elaborated by Michael Polanyi, was that the transmission of science at the level of discaverers required personal contact, which normally inovolve time spent in laboratories of famous scientists, and hands-on experience with experiments and close interaction with collegues, which in turn implied a few international …Read more
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27Zniewalające pokusy naukiZagadnienia Naukoznawstwa 56 (1). 2024.Dyskutowane są zmiany w nauce i ich znaczenie dla zrozumienia norm nauki oraz zwiększonego ulegania kontroli zewnętrznej, jakiej podlega transformacja nauki w obecnym reżimie ewaluacji, konkursów grantowych i komercjalizacji. Zadaje się także pytanie, czy rodzaj badań dotyczących fundamentalnych kwestii poruszanych w Podwójnej helisie został wyparty przez obecną organizację nauki.
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52Conceptual Scheming: L. J. Henderson, Practice, and the Harvard View of ScienceCritical Inquiry 51 (1): 30-49. 2024.L. J. Henderson was a central figure in Harvard discussions of the nature of science in the interwar period and served as a bridge between the sciences and the social sciences. Two key ideas were promoted by Henderson: systems and conceptual schemes, both of which spread quickly at Harvard and then beyond. In this article the focus will be on conceptual schemes, a term which had a distinctive origin in Henderson that accounts for some of the ambiguities in its adaptations. Henderson spoke as a s…Read more
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33Axel Hägerström and modern social thought (edited book)Bardwell Press. 2014.Axel Hägerström is one of the fairly few, if not the only, Swedish philosophers of international significance— yet, he remains in many ways unknown. A major contribution is his theory on the nature of norms and values, which came to be known as value-nihilism, celebrated by some and vehemently rejected by others: Hägerström was the first who formulated a noncognitivist moral theory and debate still continues about the exact significance, scope and implications of this theory. Together with Adolf…Read more
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34Making Scientific Knowledge a Social Psychological ProblemIn William R. Shadish & Steve Fuller (eds.), The Social Psychology of Science, Guilford Press. pp. 345-351. 1994.This is a comment and brief survey of the social psychological literature on science and its relation to some images of a scientific discourse.
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32Methodological IndividualismIn B. S. Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology, Cambridge University Press. pp. 281. 2006.
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55Edward Shils’ and Michael Young’s “The Meaning of the Coronation,” took up crucial aspects of Shils’ thinking about differentiating types of social bonds, which led to his distinction between primordial, civil, and sacred bonds, and to his focus on center and periphery and the charisma of central institutions. The relation of these concepts to colonialism and post-colonialism is complex, but the reign and death of Elizabeth II illustrate them clearly. Colonial subjects responded to the same bond…Read more
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47The Prague Spring and the Illusion of Transformational Politics: In Memory of Fred EidlinSociologický Časopis / Czech Sociological Review 54 (3): 464-470. 2018.
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101Max WeberIn B. Benewick (ed.), The Routledge Dictionary of Twentieth Century Political Thinkers, Routledge. 1992.
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27Hans Kelsen’s lack of impact on political theory in the United States has been a puzzle. Kelsen arrived at a time in which several influential political ideas competed, none of which were congenial to Kelsen’s approach, and some actively opposed to it. The narrative that relativism led to Nazism; the pragmatist rejection of the fact-value distinction; the return of natural law thinking at the University of Chicago; and a very specific conflict of perspectives at Harvard, are identified as key ob…Read more
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29Introduction to "Axel Hägerström and Modern Social Thought"In Sven Eliaeson, Patricia Mindus & Stephen Turner (eds.), Axel Hägerström and Modern Social Thought, Bardwell Press. pp. 1-16. 2014.This introduction presents the volume Axel Hägerström and Modern Social Thought published on occasion of the centennial of Hägerström's prolusion 'On the Truth of Moral Ideas'
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41The Social Study of Science before KuhnIn Edward Hackett, Olga Amsterdamska, Michael Lynch & Judy Wajcman (eds.), The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, Mit Press. pp. 33-62. 2007.
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377Science as PolityIn R. Gelwick (ed.), From Polanyi to the 21st Century, The Polanyi Society. 1997.This paper is a defense against David Hollinger's simplistic reduction of Polanyi's notions of the community of science and responsible autonomy to a plea for unsupervised funding for science. It shows how Polanyi's political account of the internal nature of science worked, the role of "influentials," and the possibility of corruption that followed.
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