
"An essential contribution... absolutely must be read widely." — Charles Taylor, author of A Secular AgeOver the last fifty years, pseudoscience has crept into nearly every facet of our lives. Popular sciences of everything from dating and economics, to voting and artificial intelligence, radically changed the world today. The abuse of popular scientific authority has catastrophic consequences, contributing to the 2008 financial crisis; the failure to predict the rise of Donald Trump; increased tensions between poor communities and the police; and the sidelining of nonscientific forms of knowledge and wisdom. In We Built Reality, Jason Blakely explains how recent social science theories have not simply described political realities but also helped create them. But he also offers readers a way out of the culture of scientism: hermeneutics, or the art of interpretation. Hermeneutics urges sensitivity to the historical and cultural contexts of human behavior. It gives ordinary people a way to appreciate the insights of the humanities in guiding decisions. As Blakely contends, we need insights from the humanities to see how social science theories never simply neutrally describe reality, they also help build it.
This book investigates how social science theories function not merely as neutral descriptions of human behavior, but as active agents that construct political and social realities. Jason Blakely, a political scientist and professor, utilizes a framework rooted in political theory and the philosophy of social science to examine the influence of scientism on modern governance and culture. He argues that the uncritical adoption of popular scientific models has led to significant societal failures, proposing hermeneutics as a necessary corrective to restore the value of humanistic interpretation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this work as a significant contribution to the philosophy of social science, particularly for its accessible critique of scientism. Readers frequently note the clarity of Blakely's prose, which makes complex philosophical concepts available to a broader audience interested in the intersection of politics and knowledge.
Page Count:
184
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190087374
ISBN-13:
9780190087371
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