What makes something social? Is human social reality, the object-domain of the human sciences, essentially opaque to the explanatory method of nomological objectivity that characterizes the physical sciences? Do historical and cultural underpinnings of human existence severely restrain the ambition of objectivity in the human sciences? Or, is there a sui generis paradigm of social objectivity in social enquiry, such as illustrated by Marxism and ethnomethodology? Besides, do diversity of traditions constrain social understanding in a way that inevitably results in cultural relativism? What does understanding tradition consist in, including whatever we might mean by "the Indian tradition"? These questions about humanity and tradition are dealt with in this book from a variety of interesting perspectives. Together these various modes on understanding provide an illuminating account of human self-understanding in social enquiry.
Social Reality and Tradition: Essays in Modes of Understanding
In stock
Free & Quick Delivery Worldwide
reviews
Bibliographic information
Title
Social Reality and Tradition: Essays in Modes of Understanding
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
Rawat Publications, 2006
ISBN
8131600408
Length
214p.
Subjects
There are no reviews yet.