The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Political Science
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-751980-6 (ISBN)
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Political Science contains twenty-seven freshly written chapters to give the reader a panoramic introduction to philosophical issues in the practice of political science. Simultaneously, it advances the field of Philosophy of Political Science by creating a fruitful meeting place where both philosophers and practicing political scientists contribute and discuss. These philosophical discussions are close to and informed by actual developments in political science, making philosophy of science continuous with the sciences, another aspiration that motivates this volume. The chapters fall under four headings: (1) evaluating theoretical frameworks in political science; (2) methodological challenges and reconciliations; (3) the purposes and uses of political science; and, (4) the interactions between political science and society. Specific topics discussed include the biology of political attitudes, intra-agent mechanisms, rational choice explanations, theories of collective action, explaining institutional change, conceptualizing and measuring democracy, process tracing, qualitative comparative analysis, interpretivism and positivism, mixed methods, within-cause causal inference, evidential pluralism, lab and field experiments, external validity, contextualization, prediction, expertise, clientelism, feminism, values, and progress in political science.
Harold Kincaid is Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Cape Town. His research concerns issues in the philosophy of science and philosophy of social and behavioral science as well as experimental work in economics on, among other things, risk and time attitudes, trust and addiction. He is the author or editor of 13 books starting with The Philosophical Foundations of the Social Sciences: Analyzing Controversies in Social Research (1996) and many journal articles and book chapters. Recent or forthcoming work includes the Elgar Companion to Philosophy of Economics with Don Ross (2021) and articles or book chapters on objectivity in the social sciences, improving causal inference in economics, the role of mechanisms in the social sciences, agent-based models, classifying mental disorders, the risk-trust confound, and prospect theory. He has been associate editor of the Journal of Economic Methodology and Chair of the International Network for Economic Methodology. Jeroen Van Bouwel is a Senior Researcher at the Centre for Logic and Philosophy of Science and a Visiting Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Moral Science at Ghent University, Belgium. His research areas include philosophy of the social sciences, social epistemology and the relations between science and democracy. His work has appeared in, inter alia, Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Economics & Philosophy, Social Epistemology, Perspectives on Science, History and Theory, Journal for General Philosophy of Science as well as in numerous collected volumes, handbooks and encyclopaedias. His books include The Social Sciences and Democracy (2009, editor) and Scientific Explanation (2013, co-authored with Erik Weber and Leen De Vreese).
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Chapter 1. Putting Philosophy of Political Science on the map - Harold Kincaid and Jeroen Van Bouwel
Part 1. Analyzing Basic Frameworks in Political Science
Chapter 2. The Biology of Politics: Some Limitations and Reasons for Caution - Jonathan Kaplan
Chapter 3. The Biological Aspects of Political Attitudes - David Henderson and Stephen Schneider
Chapter 4. Rational Choice Explanations in Political Science - Catherine Herfeld and Johannes Marx
Chapter 5. Strategic Theory of Norms for Empirical Applications in Political Science and Political Economy - Don Ross, Wynn C. Stirling and Luca Tummolini
Chapter 6. Explaining Institutional Change - Emrah Aydinonat and Petri Ylikoski
Chapter 7. Public Choice vs Social Choice as Theories of Collective Action - Jesús Zamora-Bonilla
Chapter 8. Nineteen Kinds of Theories about Mechanisms that Every Social Science Graduate Student Should Know - Andrew Bennett and Benjamin Mishkin
Part 2. Methods in Political Science, Debates and Reconciliations
Chapter 9. Conceptualizing and Measuring Democracy - Sharon Crasnow
Chapter 10. Qualitative Research in Political Science - Julie Zahle
Chapter 11. Interpretivism versus Positivism in an Age of Causal Inference - Janet Lawler and David Waldner
Chapter 12. Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA): A pluralistic approach to causal inference - Federica Russo and Benoît Rihoux
Chapter 13. Mixed methods research and the variety of evidence in political science - Jaakko Kuorikoski and Caterina Marchionni
Chapter 14. Generalization, case studies, and within-case causal inference: Large-N Qualitative Analysis - Gary Goertz and Stephan Haggard
Chapter 15. Process Tracing: Defining the Undefinable - Christopher Clarke
Chapter 16. Process Tracing: Process Tracing: Causation and Levels of Analysis - Keith Dowding
Chapter 17. Interventions in Political Science - Peter John
Chapter 18. Lab Experiments in Political Science through the Lens of Experimental Economics - Andre Hofmeyr and Harold Kincaid
Part 3. Purposes and Uses of Political Science
Chapter 19. Philosophy of Science Issues in Clientelism Research - Harold Kincaid, Miquel Pellicer and Eva Wegner
Chapter 20. External Validity in Philosophy and Political Science: Three Paradoxes - Maria Jiménez-Buedo
Chapter 21. Context, Contextualization and Case-Study Research - Attilia Ruzzene
Chapter 22. Prediction, history and political science - Robert Northcott
Part 4. Political Science in Society: Values, Expertise and Progress
Chapter 23. Taking Feminism Seriously in Political Science: A Cross-Disciplinary Dialog - Season Hoard, Laci Hubbard-Mattix, Amy G. Mazur and Samantha Noll
Chapter 24. Dealing with Values in Political Science - Jeroen Van Bouwel
Chapter 25. Positivism and Value Free Ideals in Political Science - Harold Kincaid
Chapter 26. Political Experts, Expertise, and Expert Judgment - Julian Reiss
Chapter 27. Progress in International Politics: The Democratic Peace Debate - Fred Chernoff
Erscheinungsdatum | 06.02.2023 |
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Reihe/Serie | OXFORD HANDBOOKS SERIES |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 256 x 178 mm |
Gewicht | 1157 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Philosophie |
Naturwissenschaften | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Politische Theorie | |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-751980-6 / 0197519806 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-751980-6 / 9780197519806 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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