Objectivity and the Silence of Reason: Weber, Habermas, and the Methodological Disputes in German Sociology

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Transaction Publishers - Philosophy - 341 pages

Issues important to the philosophy of social science are widely discussed in the American academy today. Some social scientists resist the very idea of a debate on general issues. They continue to focus on behaviorist and positivist criteria, and the concepts, methods, and theories appropriate to a particular and narrow form of scientific inquiry. McCarthy argues that a new and valuable perspective may be gained on these questions through a return to philosophical debates surrounding the origins and development of nineteenth- and twentieth-century German sociology. In Objectivity and the Silence of Reason he focuses on two key figures, Max Weber and Jurrgen Habermas, reopening the vibrant and rich intellectual dispute about knowledge and truth in epistemology and concept formation, logic of analysis, and methodology in the social sciences. He uses this debate to explore the forms of objectivity in everyday experience and science, and the relations between science, ethics, and politics.

McCarthy analyzes the tension in Weber's work between his early methodological writings with their emphasis on interpretive science, subjective intentionality, cultural and historical meaning and the later works that emphasize issues of explanatory science, natural causality, social prediction, and nomological law. While arguing for a value-free science, Weber was highly critical of the disenchanted and meaningless world of technical reason and rejected positivist objectivity. McCarthy shows how Habermas attempted to resolve tensions in Weber's work by clarifying the relationship between the methods of subjective interpretation and objective causality. Habermas believes that social science cannot be silent in the face of alienation, false consciousness, and the oppression of technological and administrative rationality and must adopt methodologies connected to the broader ethical and political questions of the day.

Drawing deeply on the Kantian and neo-Kantian tradition that contributed to the development of Weber's method, Objectivity and the Silence of Reason demonstrates the crucial integration of philosophy and sociology in German intellectual culture. It elucidates the complexities of the development of modern social science. The book will be of interest to sociologists, philosophers, and intellectual historians.

 

Contents

NeoKantian Epistemology and the Construction of Historical Objectivity Kant and Rickert
27
Kantian Existentialism and the Warring Gods of Modernity From Schopenhauer to Nietzsche
69
Max Weber and the Kantians Epistemology and Method in the Wissenschaftslehre
127
Methodological Disputes in the Twentieth Century Rationalism Hermeneutics and Critical Theory
213
Critical Rationalism and Critical Theory Popper Adorno Habermas and Albert
215
Reintegrating Science and Ethics Explanatory Interpretive and Emancipatory Sociology in Habermas
267
Index
337
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Page 39 - There must, therefore, be a transcendental ground of the unity of consciousness in the synthesis of the manifold of all our...
Page 38 - The objective validity of the categories as a priori concepts rests, therefore, on the fact that, so far as the form of thought is concerned, through them alone does experience become possible.
Page 35 - Through the first an object is given to us ; through the second, it is, in relation to the representation (which is a mere determination of the mind), thought. Intuition and conceptions constitute, therefore, the elements of all our knowledge, so that...

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