Epistemology, Methodology, and the Social Sciences
[Book]
edited by Robert S. Cohen, Marx W. Wartofsky.
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
1983
(viii, 270 pages)
Boston studies in the philosophy of science, 71.
Ideology and Objectivity --;Toward a Logic of Historical Constitution --;Beyond Causality in the Social Sciences: Reciprocity as a Model of Non-exploitative Social Relations --;Empiricism and the Philosophy of Science, or, n Dogmas of Empiricism --;Realism and the Supposed Poverty of Sociological Theories --;The Role and Status of the Rationality Principle in the Social Sciences --;Marxian Paradigms versus Microeconomic Structures --;Paradise not Surrendered: Jewish Reactions to Copernicus and the Growth of Modern Science --;The Peculiar Evolutionary Strategy of Man --;Technologies as Forms of Life --;Index of Names.
Though these disturbances intruded upon what had seemed to be the logically well-ordered domain of the philoso- phy of the natural sciences, they were no news to the social sciences.