The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases

This article aims at reconstructing and interpreting the meanings of scientific progress present in selected important works within the discipline of International Relations (IR). This research objective stems from the gap in the literature concerning scientific progress in IR, as it is mostly conce...

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Main Author: Mateusz Filary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing 2021-12-01
Series:Politeja
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.akademicka.pl/politeja/article/view/4017
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author Mateusz Filary
author_facet Mateusz Filary
author_sort Mateusz Filary
collection DOAJ
description This article aims at reconstructing and interpreting the meanings of scientific progress present in selected important works within the discipline of International Relations (IR). This research objective stems from the gap in the literature concerning scientific progress in IR, as it is mostly concerned with the evaluation of the progressiveness of particular approaches, paradigms within the discipline. The reconstruction of meanings given by particular IR scholars to scientific progress is conducted only as far as its instrumental for the critique of their approaches and making room for the approaches of the critics. My objective is different – using a method inspired by the history of ideas and the research technique of qualitative content analysis, I will attempt to answer the following research questions: Q1 – How is the category of scientific progress of IR understood by particular scholars? Q2 – What are the contexts of its usage? Q3 – How can we interpret the rationale behind the employment of particular meanings in particular contexts? Q4 – How, on the basis of all cases, can we depict the flow of ideas of scientific progress through the history of IR? The cases selected span the development of IR from World War II to the early 2000s: Edward Carr’s The Twenty Years’ Crisis; Morton Kaplan’s texts from the early phase of the second great debate; John Vasquez’s The Power of Power Politics; and Miriam and Colin Elman’s Progress in International Relations Theory. On the basis of these cases I will argue that the notion of scientific progress in IR is an essentially contested concept within the discipline. Despite certain similarities in the meaning of the term among the cases – a cumulative notion of scientific progress – all of them are used in a way that is intended to legitimize the approach of a particular author as ‘properly scientific’. Another conclusion drawn is that although differing in kind, all of the cases consider important historical events that do not shape the meanings of progress themselves, but instead create a window of opportunity for particular meanings, as their context.
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spelling doaj.art-58c6c5a5cbd24c59b4a2fa15e460083f2022-12-21T20:12:38ZengKsiegarnia Akademicka PublishingPoliteja1733-67162391-67372021-12-01186(75)10.12797/Politeja.18.2021.75.02The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected casesMateusz Filary0Jesuit University Ignatianum in KrakowThis article aims at reconstructing and interpreting the meanings of scientific progress present in selected important works within the discipline of International Relations (IR). This research objective stems from the gap in the literature concerning scientific progress in IR, as it is mostly concerned with the evaluation of the progressiveness of particular approaches, paradigms within the discipline. The reconstruction of meanings given by particular IR scholars to scientific progress is conducted only as far as its instrumental for the critique of their approaches and making room for the approaches of the critics. My objective is different – using a method inspired by the history of ideas and the research technique of qualitative content analysis, I will attempt to answer the following research questions: Q1 – How is the category of scientific progress of IR understood by particular scholars? Q2 – What are the contexts of its usage? Q3 – How can we interpret the rationale behind the employment of particular meanings in particular contexts? Q4 – How, on the basis of all cases, can we depict the flow of ideas of scientific progress through the history of IR? The cases selected span the development of IR from World War II to the early 2000s: Edward Carr’s The Twenty Years’ Crisis; Morton Kaplan’s texts from the early phase of the second great debate; John Vasquez’s The Power of Power Politics; and Miriam and Colin Elman’s Progress in International Relations Theory. On the basis of these cases I will argue that the notion of scientific progress in IR is an essentially contested concept within the discipline. Despite certain similarities in the meaning of the term among the cases – a cumulative notion of scientific progress – all of them are used in a way that is intended to legitimize the approach of a particular author as ‘properly scientific’. Another conclusion drawn is that although differing in kind, all of the cases consider important historical events that do not shape the meanings of progress themselves, but instead create a window of opportunity for particular meanings, as their context.https://www.journals.akademicka.pl/politeja/article/view/4017International Relationsphilosophy of social scienceshistoriography – IRprogress in IRtheory of IR
spellingShingle Mateusz Filary
The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
Politeja
International Relations
philosophy of social sciences
historiography – IR
progress in IR
theory of IR
title The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
title_full The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
title_fullStr The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
title_full_unstemmed The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
title_short The meanings of scientific progress in the history of International Relations – selected cases
title_sort meanings of scientific progress in the history of international relations selected cases
topic International Relations
philosophy of social sciences
historiography – IR
progress in IR
theory of IR
url https://www.journals.akademicka.pl/politeja/article/view/4017
work_keys_str_mv AT mateuszfilary themeaningsofscientificprogressinthehistoryofinternationalrelationsselectedcases
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