1st Edition

Science and Ideology in the Policy Sciences

By Paul Diesing Copyright 2005
    484 Pages
    by Routledge

    483 Pages
    by Routledge

    The purpose of this book is to examine how ideology operates - in the sense of influencing the conduct of inquiry - in the policy sciences, defined as economics, political science, and sociology. In it, Diesing critically explores all the major schools of policy-related social thought from 1930 to 1975. Richard Hartwig, in his new introduction, notes, 'In 1982, Diesing published a remarkable book entitled Science and Ideology in the Policy Sciences. [It] was the best book I had read in a decade, and it related directly to all the policy sciences…. I consider this to be the most brilliant of Diesing's books. Like all of Diesing's works, it remains highly relevant today.'

    1: Social Studies of Science; I: ; 2: Neoclassical Economics; 3: Extended Applications of the Neoclassical Perspective; 4: Keynesian Economics; 5: The Objectification of Society; The Systems Approach; 6: Schumpeter and the Intellectuals; 7: The Critical Intellectuals; 8: Galbraith and the Objectification of Government; 9: New Left Marxism; 10: Schumacher and Appropriate Technology; 11: Summary of Part I; II: ; 12: Some Historical Patterns; 13: Science and Morality; 14: The Organization of Science; 15: The Growth of Science

    Biography

    Paul Diesing