Skip to main content
  • 31 Accesses

Abstract

The successes of the natural sciences are not in doubt; our pattern of life is structured by the pursuit of science; our ordinary lives are suffused with its achievements, the cities and suburbs in which we live could not be sustained without routines and machineries built on the knowledge of natural science. The sciences are central to our form of life, they do not exist off to one side, feeding in novelties; their products underpin our form of life, their habits of thought suffuse our thinking and they provide the common paradigm of knowledge. Yet it remains a contingent historical cultural achievement. Norman Davies1 has reminded us of the nature of the world before the rise of science: the key intellectual, moral and institutional mechanism was the Church; the world was constituted in theistic terms, and the shift to our world, centrally materialist in the philosophical sense, was long drawn out, not simply a debate about ideas but a conflict about power and livelihood, the business of implanting mercantile agrarian capitalism from the sixteenth century onwards. The sciences have a place within our society and the depth of their reach within our form of life is an important issue; but it is not enough to say that science is central, the benefits obvious;because, in particular, for us, there is the question of the nature of a social science.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this chapter

Chapter
USD 29.95
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
eBook
USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Hardcover Book
USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Purchases are for personal use only

Institutional subscriptions

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Notes

  1. Norman Davies 2000 Europe: A History, London, Pimlico

    Google Scholar 

  2. The convenient notion of ‘the orthodox’ is from a trio of essays: Anthony Giddens 1979 ‘The prospects for social theory today’ in Central Problems in Social Theory, London, Macmillan

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  3. Anthony Giddens 1982 ‘Classical social theory and the origins of modern sociology’ in Profiles and Critiques in Social Theory, London, Macmillan

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  4. Anthony Giddens 1987 ‘Nine theses on the future of sociology’ in Social Theory and Modern Sociology, Cambridge, Polity

    Google Scholar 

  5. William Outhwaite 1975 Understanding Social Life: The Method Called Verstehen, London, Allen and Unwin

    Google Scholar 

  6. Zygmunt Bauman 1978 Hermeneutics and Social Science, London, Hutchinson

    Google Scholar 

  7. Ted Benton 1977 Philosophical Foundations of the Three Sociologies, London, Routledge

    Google Scholar 

  8. Richard Kilminster 1979 Praxis and Method: A Sociological Dialogue with Lukacs, Gramsci and the Early Frankfurt School, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul

    Google Scholar 

  9. Richard Rorty 1999 Philosophy and Social Hope, London, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  10. Paradigmatically, French;analysed by Immanuel Kant in What is Enlightenment? See Roy Porter 2001 2nd ed. The Enlightenment, London, Palgrave

    Google Scholar 

  11. Gertrude Himmelfarb 2005 The Roads to Modernity: The British, French and American Enlightenments, New York, Vintage

    Google Scholar 

  12. In particular: J. Passmore 1970 The Perfectibility of Man, London, Duckworth

    Google Scholar 

  13. S. Pollard 1971 The Idea of Progress, Harmondsworth, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  14. A.F. Chalmers 1982 2nd ed. What is this Thing Called Science?, Milton Keynes, Open University Press, pp.67–75

    Google Scholar 

  15. Alasdair MacIntyre 1967 A Short History of Ethics, London, Routledge

    Book  Google Scholar 

  16. Jane Rendall 1978 The Origins of the Scottish Enlightenment, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  17. A.C. Chitnis 1976 The Scottish Enlightenment: A Social History, London, Croom Helm

    Google Scholar 

  18. Pollard 1971; Porter 2001, see also Ian Buruma 1999 Voltaire’s Coconuts: Or Anglomania in Europe, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson

    Google Scholar 

  19. John Plamenatz 1963 Man and Society Vol. 1, London, Longman

    Google Scholar 

  20. Raymond Aron 1968 Main Currents in Sociological Thought Vol. 1, Harmondsworth, Pelican

    Google Scholar 

  21. This is a simplification of complex debates, see Barrington Moore 1967 The Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy, London, Allen Lane

    Google Scholar 

  22. Greta Jones 1980 Social Darwinism and English Thought, Brighton, Harvester

    Google Scholar 

  23. R.J. Evans 1997 Re-reading German History: From Unification to Reunification 1800–1996, London, Routledge

    Google Scholar 

  24. Benedict Anderson 1983 Imagined Communities, London, Verso

    Google Scholar 

  25. Ernest Gellner 1983 Nations and Nationalism, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  26. Robert Nisbet 1970 The Sociological Tradition, London, Heinemann

    Google Scholar 

  27. Raymond Williams 1963 Culture and Society 1780–1950, Harmondsworth, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  28. H. Stuart Hughes 1959 Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought 1890–1930, London, MacGibbon and Kee

    Google Scholar 

  29. Zygmunt Bauman 1987 Legislators and Interpreters, Cambridge, Polity

    Google Scholar 

  30. P.W. Preston 1996 Development Theory: An Introduction, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  31. Anthony Giddens 1972 Politics and Sociology in the Thought of Max Weber, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  32. Martin Jay 1973 The Dialectical Imagination, Boston, Little Brown

    Google Scholar 

  33. See Sahotra Sarkar (ed.) 1996 Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism: Vol. 6 The Legacy of the Vienna Circle, New York, Garland Publishing

    Google Scholar 

  34. Allan Janik and Stephen Toulmin 1973 Wittgenstein’s Vienna, New York, Simon and Shuster

    Google Scholar 

  35. Alastair Bonnett 2004 The Idea of the West: Culture, Politics and History, London, Palgrave

    Google Scholar 

  36. C.A. Bayly 2004 The Birth of the Modern World 1780–1914, Oxford, Blackwell, pp.312–22

    Google Scholar 

  37. Christopher Bryant 1985 Positivism in Social Theory and Research, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  38. Christian Brandstatter (ed.) 2006 Vienna 1900 And the Heroes of Modernism, London, Thames and Hudson

    Google Scholar 

  39. Peter Gay 2008 Modernism: The Lure of Heresy, New York, Norton

    Google Scholar 

  40. For a sense of the confusions amongst which politicians, intellectuals and ordinary people moved, see Mark Mazower 1998 Dark Continent: Europe’s Twentieth Century, London, Allen Lane

    Google Scholar 

  41. Allan Janik 2001 Wittgenstein’s Vienna Revisited, New Brunswick, Transaction, p.199

    Google Scholar 

  42. Oswald Hanfling 1981 Logical Positivism, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  43. also Marx W. Wartofsky 1996 ‘Positivism and Politics: The Vienna Circle as a Social Movement’ in Sahotra Sarkar (ed.) 1996 Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism: Vol. 6 The Legacy of the Vienna Circle, New York, Garland Publishing

    Google Scholar 

  44. Ray Monk 1991 Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius, London, Vintage

    Google Scholar 

  45. Karl Popper 1974 5th ed. Conjectures and Refutations, London, Routledge

    Google Scholar 

  46. The manifesto is reprinted in Sahotra Sarkar (ed.) 1996 Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works ofLogical Empiricism: Vol. 1 The Emergence of Logical Empiricism, New York, Garland Publishing, pp.321–41

    Google Scholar 

  47. A.J. Ayer 1971 Language, Truth and Logic, Harmondsworth, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  48. Perry Anderson 1992 English Questions, London, Verso, pp.60–4

    Google Scholar 

  49. Daniel Snowman 2003 The Hitler Émigrés: The Cultural Impact on Britain of Refugees from Nazism, London, Pimlico

    Google Scholar 

  50. There is also an evolutionary theory of objective structures, real, social and cognitive, World Three, see Bryan Magee 1973 Popper, London, Fontana

    Google Scholar 

  51. Marjorie Greene 1966 The Knower and the Known, London, Faber and Faber

    Google Scholar 

  52. T. Tudor 1982 Beyond Empiricism, London, Routledge, p.144

    Google Scholar 

  53. Karl Popper 1945 The Open Society and Its Enemies, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul

    Google Scholar 

  54. Karl Popper 1957 The Poverty of Historicism, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul

    Google Scholar 

  55. W.V.O. Quine and J.S. Ullian 1970 The Web of Belief, New York, Random House

    Google Scholar 

  56. W.V.O. Quine 1953 From a Logical Point of View, New York, Harper

    Google Scholar 

  57. R.J. Anderson, J.A. Hughes and W.W. Sharock 1986 Philosophy and the Human Sciences, London, Croom Helm

    Google Scholar 

  58. William Outhwaite 1987 New Philosophies of Social Science: Realism, Hermeneutics and Critical Theory, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  59. Gerard Delanty and Piet Strydom (eds) 2003 Philosophies ofSocial Science: The Classical and Contemporary Readings, Maidenhead, Open University Press, p.19

    Google Scholar 

  60. Ernest Nagel 1961 The Structure of Science, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul

    Google Scholar 

  61. Stephen Gudeman 1986 Economics as Culture, London, Routledge

    Google Scholar 

  62. P.W. Preston 1996 Development Theory: An Introduction, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  63. Thomas Kuhn 1970 2nd ed. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, University of Chicago;Richard Bernstein 1979 The Restructuring of Social and Political Theory, London, Methuen

    Google Scholar 

  64. Richard Bernstein 1983 Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics and Praxis, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  65. Paul Feyerabend 1988 Revised ed. Against Method, London, Verso

    Google Scholar 

  66. Paul Feyerabend 1978 Science in a Free Society, London, New Left Books

    Google Scholar 

  67. E. Gellner 1964 Thought and Change, p.179, London, Weidenfeld

    Google Scholar 

  68. P.W. Preston 1994 Discourses of Development, Aldershot, Avebury

    Google Scholar 

  69. A.K. Dasgupta 1985 Epochs of Economic Theory, pp.90–5, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

  70. It was to become a key text in the monetarist attack on Keynes, see David Smith 1987 The Rise and Fall of Monetarism, Harmondsworth, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  71. Milton Friedman 1962 Capitalism and Freedom, University of Chicago Press;Milton Friedman and Rose Friedman 1980 Free to Choose, London, Secker

    Google Scholar 

  72. Ken Cole, John Cameron and Chris Edwards 1991 Why Economists Disagree, London, Longman

    Google Scholar 

  73. Roger Backhouse 2002 The Penguin History of Economics, Harmondsworth, Penguin

    Google Scholar 

  74. Paul Ormerod 1994 The Death of Economics, London, Faber and Faber

    Google Scholar 

  75. John Pheby 1988 Methodology and Economics: A Critical Introduction, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  76. Philip Mirowski 1988 Against Mechanism: Protecting Economics from Science, New Jersey, Rowman and Littlefield

    Google Scholar 

  77. Fredric Jameson 1991 Postmodernism: The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, London, Verso

    Google Scholar 

  78. Gudeman 1986;John Clammer 1985 Anthropology and Political Economy, London, Macmillan

    Book  Google Scholar 

  79. Preston 1996;Kyoko Sheridan (ed.) 1998 Emerging Economic Systems in Asia, St. Leonards, Allen and Unwin

    Google Scholar 

  80. See Mathew Watson 2005 Foundations of International Political Economy, London, Palgrave

    Google Scholar 

  81. Geoffrey Hawthorn 1976 Enlightenment and Despair, Cambridge University Press; Birgitta Nedelmann and Piet Sztompka (eds) 1993 Sociology in Europe: In Search ofan Identity, Berlin, Walter de Gruyter

    Google Scholar 

  82. Robert Merton 1968 (enlarged edition) Social Theory and Social Structure, New York, The Free Press

    Google Scholar 

  83. Colin Hay 2002 Political Analysis: A Critical Introduction, London, Palgrave

    Google Scholar 

  84. Dave Marsh and Gerry Stoker (eds) 1995 Theory and Methods in Political Science, London, Macmillan

    Google Scholar 

  85. Michael Cox, Introduction to E.H. Carr 1939 (2001) The Twenty Year Crisis, London, Palgrave

    Google Scholar 

  86. John Haslam 1999 The Vices of Integrity: E.H. Carr 1892–1982, London, Verso

    Google Scholar 

  87. B.M.A. Crawford 2000 Idealism and Realism in International Relations, London, Routledge

    Google Scholar 

  88. Charles Taylor 1967 ‘Neutrality in Political Science’ in P. Laslett and W.G. Runciman (eds) Philosophy, Politics and Society Third Series, Oxford, Blackwell

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Copyright information

© 2009 Peter Preston

About this chapter

Cite this chapter

Preston, P. (2009). Arguments from Natural Science. In: Arguments and Actions in Social Theory. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230234178_2

Download citation

Publish with us

Policies and ethics