1st Edition

Human Sciences and Human Interests Integrating the Social, Economic, and Evolutionary Sciences

By Mikael Klintman Copyright 2017
    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    Within the disciplines of social, economic, and evolutionary science, a proud ignorance can often be found of the other areas’ approaches. This text provides a novel intellectual basis for breaking this trend. Certainly, Human Sciences and Human Interests aspires to open a broad debate about what scholars in the different human sciences assume, imply or explicitly claim with regard to human interests.

     

    Mikael Klintman draws the reader to the core of human sciences - how they conceive human interests, as well as how interests embedded within each discipline relate to its claims and recommendations. Moreover, by comparing theories as well as concrete examples of research on health and environment through the lenses of social, economic and evolutionary sciences, Klintman outlines an integrative framework for how human interests could be better analysed across all human sciences.

     

    This fast-paced and modern contribution to the field is a necessary tool for developing any human scientist’s ability to address multidimensional problems within a rapidly changing society. Avoiding dogmatic reasoning, this interdisciplinary text offers new insights and will be especially relevant to scholars and advanced students within the aforementioned disciplines, as well as those within the fields of social work, social policy, political science and other neighbouring disciplines.

    Introduction

    Part I: Manifest and Latent Interests

    1. Dual systems in the human sciences

    2. The Apollonian dimension

    3. The Dionysian dimension

    Part II: Universal and Culturally Specific Interests

    4. Glory, honour, or at least esteem

    5. The blank slate and its critics

    6. Understanding the prepared slate

    Part III: Interests, Continuity and Change

    7. Economics: Interests, continuity and change

    8. Social science: Interests, continuity & change

    9. Evolutionary theory: Interests, continuity and change

    Conclusions

    References

    Biography

    Mikael Klintman is Professor of Sociology at Lund University, Sweden, and Visiting Academic of St. Anthony’s College, Oxford University, UK. He studies obstacles to knowledge exchange across the human sciences in issues of environment and health. Klintman’s previous publications include Citizen-Consumers and Evolution (Palgrave, 2012).