How the Social Sciences Think about the World's Social: Outline of a Critique (Beyond the Social Sciences)

by Michael Kuhn

Michael Kuhn, Hebe Vessuri, and Shujiro Yazawa

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Book cover for How the Social Sciences Think about the World's Social

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At the beginning of the new millennium, the social sciences discover an epochal turn making it necessary to revolutionise their theory-building: As a response to what they call the globalisation of the social, they find the need to globalise their theorising as well. It is odd to discover after two centuries of colonialism and imperialism, after two world wars and several economic world crises that there is a world beyond the national socials; it is even more strange that the social sciences globalise their theorising by comparing theories about nationally confined socials and by creating all sorts of, preferably, local theories, just as if any national social was a secluded social biotope. Discussing how to globalise the social sciences, they argue that globalising social science theorising means finding a way of theorising that must, above all, be liberated from scientism in order to allow a provincialisation of thinking. Not surprisingly, the globalising social sciences also rediscover mythological and moral thinking as a means for a true scientific universalism. Michael Kuhns book presents many thought-provoking arguments on the oddities of the globalising social sciences and on how these oddities are not accidents, but a consequence of the nature of how the social sciences theorise about the social.
  • ISBN10 3838208927
  • ISBN13 9783838208923
  • Publish Date 1 September 2016
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country DE
  • Imprint ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Christian Schon
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 260
  • Language English