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ID117840
Title ProperIntroduction to the forum
LanguageENG
AuthorKessler, Oliver
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the last couple of years, Critical Realism has established itself as an alone-standing intellectual movement in International Relations (IR). It not only seeks to challenge the idea of the middle ground on which most of the more moderate versions of constructivist thought base their convictions, but it also seeks to provide own answers to basic scientific problems around the relationship between facts and values, causation and causality, or agents and structure. If one would want to characterise Critical Realist positions, one has to point to their attempted resurrection of ontology. Taking inspiration, in particular, from Bhaskar's Possibility of Naturalism and subsequent works, different strands of Critical Realism are tied together in their conviction that epistemology has had too much influence on scientific debates ever since Kant changed the structure of philosophical reasoning by asking how objects were determined by concepts rather than the other way round. The prevalent focus on epistemological questions is not only biased and asks the wrong questions, but it starts from false premises in the first place, as Wight and Patomäki once put it: every theory of knowledge must also logically presuppose a theory of what the world is like (ontology) for knowledge (epistemology) to be possible.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 38, No.1; Jan 2012: p.187-189
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 38, No.1; Jan 2012: p.187-189
Key WordsInternational Relations ;  Critical Realist Positions ;  Ontology ;  Inspiration ;  Naturalism


 
 
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