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SCIENCE - POLITICS (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   087626


Beyond the ivory tower: frontiers of public and private science / Zuckerman, Solly 1984  Book
Zuckerman, Solly Book
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Publication New York, Talinger Publishing Company, 1984.
Description ix, 244p.
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
022685338.926042/ZUC 022685MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   090674


Unrealism of contemporary realism: the tension between realist theory and realists' practice / Oren, Ido   Journal Article
Oren, Ido Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Realist International Relations thinkers often intervene in political debates and criticize their governments' policies even as they pride themselves on theorizing politics as it "really" is. They rarely reflect on the following contradictions between their theory and their practice: if there is a "real world" impervious to political thought, why bother to try to influence it? And, is realist theory not putatively disconfirmed by the fact that realist thinkers have so often opposed existing foreign policies (e.g., the wars in Vietnam and Iraq)? I argue that these contradictions are not inherent in realism per se so much as in the commitment of contemporary realists to naturalistic methodological and epistemological postulates. I show that Hans Morgenthau and especially E. H. Carr, far from being naïve "traditionalists," have grappled with these questions in a sophisticated manner; they have adopted non-naturalistic methodological and epistemological stances that minimize the tension between realist theory and the realities of realists' public activism. I conclude with a call for contemporary realists to adjust their theory to their practice by trading the dualism underlying their approach-subject-object; science-politics; purpose-analysis-for E. H. Carr's dictum that "political thought is itself a form of political action."
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