Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory

In certain disciplines there is no big temporal gap between the old problems and the new ones: old questions may elicit reactions pertaining to the very present. Natural and human sciences differ in the respect that their relation to their own history is different. In the humanities, cultivating „hi...

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Main Author: György C. Kálmán
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cercle linguistique du Centre et de l'Ouest - CerLICO
Series:Corela
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/corela/4536
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author György C. Kálmán
author_facet György C. Kálmán
author_sort György C. Kálmán
collection DOAJ
description In certain disciplines there is no big temporal gap between the old problems and the new ones: old questions may elicit reactions pertaining to the very present. Natural and human sciences differ in the respect that their relation to their own history is different. In the humanities, cultivating „history of the sciences” is in fact not at all a historical study: that is, it is not an analysis of closed, completed periods but rather raising, again, older questions. Marking off a turning point here is far from being an ever valid, impartial, objective act; naming a period (or an author, a work, a theory etc.) a turning point is, in fact, an activity by which we not only write (or re-write) the history of the human sciences but it also counts as a contribution to the scholarship of our own present; regarding something as a turning point is not so much a proposition of the turning point itself but rather refers to those who pronounce this sentence. I regard system theoretical approaches or schools as such a turning point and argue that it is not a story of the decay of Structuralism, its decomposition: the systemic approach to (or systems theory of) literature (or humanities in general) is, then, not in fact ready, completed, it could and should be put together from very precious spare parts; such an inquiry would posit the process of producing, mediating and consuming texts within the structure and history of society; it would contemplate texts as operating in a given system which has its own participants, agents having different functions, roles.
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spelling doaj.art-c059f05f9f194bd08121758abd8820132024-02-13T13:52:28ZengCercle linguistique du Centre et de l'Ouest - CerLICOCorela1638-573X1910.4000/corela.4536Turning Points in Research: Systems and TheoryGyörgy C. KálmánIn certain disciplines there is no big temporal gap between the old problems and the new ones: old questions may elicit reactions pertaining to the very present. Natural and human sciences differ in the respect that their relation to their own history is different. In the humanities, cultivating „history of the sciences” is in fact not at all a historical study: that is, it is not an analysis of closed, completed periods but rather raising, again, older questions. Marking off a turning point here is far from being an ever valid, impartial, objective act; naming a period (or an author, a work, a theory etc.) a turning point is, in fact, an activity by which we not only write (or re-write) the history of the human sciences but it also counts as a contribution to the scholarship of our own present; regarding something as a turning point is not so much a proposition of the turning point itself but rather refers to those who pronounce this sentence. I regard system theoretical approaches or schools as such a turning point and argue that it is not a story of the decay of Structuralism, its decomposition: the systemic approach to (or systems theory of) literature (or humanities in general) is, then, not in fact ready, completed, it could and should be put together from very precious spare parts; such an inquiry would posit the process of producing, mediating and consuming texts within the structure and history of society; it would contemplate texts as operating in a given system which has its own participants, agents having different functions, roles.https://journals.openedition.org/corela/4536history of human sciences; turning points; objectivity; systems theory; structuralism; literary theory;
spellingShingle György C. Kálmán
Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
Corela
history of human sciences; turning points; objectivity; systems theory; structuralism; literary theory;
title Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
title_full Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
title_fullStr Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
title_full_unstemmed Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
title_short Turning Points in Research: Systems and Theory
title_sort turning points in research systems and theory
topic history of human sciences; turning points; objectivity; systems theory; structuralism; literary theory;
url https://journals.openedition.org/corela/4536
work_keys_str_mv AT gyorgyckalman turningpointsinresearchsystemsandtheory