Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism

This article investigates whether there are necessarily links between relativist and rationalist thinking and the nature of the politics that ensues from these epistemologies. Claims that posit such linkages have permeated political theory as well as the philosophy of science for many decades. The...

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Main Author: Murray Faure
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2006-12-01
Series:Acta Academica
Online Access:http://196.255.246.28/index.php/aa/article/view/1094
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author Murray Faure
author_facet Murray Faure
author_sort Murray Faure
collection DOAJ
description This article investigates whether there are necessarily links between relativist and rationalist thinking and the nature of the politics that ensues from these epistemologies. Claims that posit such linkages have permeated political theory as well as the philosophy of science for many decades. The arguments in earlier as well as more recent discourses to this end are appraised here, with no necessary causal link being found between the claims of these discourses and the conventional world of politics. Political theory and metatheory are not substitutes for the thought that informs political action, and hence the nature of politics. The analysis suggests that the two epistemologies can co-exist, irrespective of whether politics is democratic or autocratic in nature. To the extent that epistemologies inform political thought, their nature does not predetermine the nature of the politics that they inform; the latter is rather a function of substantive claims contained in the epistemologies themselves, of the complex and dynamic interaction between these claims, and of a multitude of other factors.
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spelling doaj.art-130533e797e5428b9192863e6a47c7d52024-03-18T11:07:03ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Academica0587-24052415-04792006-12-0138310.38140/aa.v38i3.1094Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalismMurray Faure0University of South Africa This article investigates whether there are necessarily links between relativist and rationalist thinking and the nature of the politics that ensues from these epistemologies. Claims that posit such linkages have permeated political theory as well as the philosophy of science for many decades. The arguments in earlier as well as more recent discourses to this end are appraised here, with no necessary causal link being found between the claims of these discourses and the conventional world of politics. Political theory and metatheory are not substitutes for the thought that informs political action, and hence the nature of politics. The analysis suggests that the two epistemologies can co-exist, irrespective of whether politics is democratic or autocratic in nature. To the extent that epistemologies inform political thought, their nature does not predetermine the nature of the politics that they inform; the latter is rather a function of substantive claims contained in the epistemologies themselves, of the complex and dynamic interaction between these claims, and of a multitude of other factors. http://196.255.246.28/index.php/aa/article/view/1094
spellingShingle Murray Faure
Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
Acta Academica
title Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
title_full Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
title_fullStr Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
title_short Cognitive dimensions of politics: relativism and rationalism
title_sort cognitive dimensions of politics relativism and rationalism
url http://196.255.246.28/index.php/aa/article/view/1094
work_keys_str_mv AT murrayfaure cognitivedimensionsofpoliticsrelativismandrationalism