Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Famous Quotes about Life and Living (519 Quotations)


Quote Bullet

A free life cannot acquire many possessions, because this is not easy to do without servility to mobs or monarchs...
Epicurus

Quote Bullet

A life is like a tree -- if you don't make it straight when its young and green, you'll never do it when it's old and dry.
Anonymous

Quote Bullet

A life of ease is a difficult pursuit.
William Cowper

Quote Bullet

A light heart lives long.
Proverb

Quote Bullet

A man sooner or later discovers that he is the master-gardener of his soul, the director of his life.
James Allen

Quote Bullet

A man's life is 20 years of having his mother ask him where he is going, 40 years of having his wife ask the same question and, at the end, perhaps having the mourners wondering too.
Anonymous

Quote Bullet

A ship should not ride on a single anchor, nor life on a single hope.
Epictetus

Quote Bullet

Accept life, take it as it is? Stupid. The means of doing otherwise? Far from our having to take it, it is life that possesses us and on occasion shuts our mouths.
Albert Camus

Quote Bullet

After all, life is really simple; we ourselves create the circumstances that complicate it.
Anonymous

Quote Bullet

All of life is a foreign country.
Jack Kerouac

Quote Bullet

All that man has will he give for his life.
Bible

Quote Bullet

Always take hold of things by the smooth handle.
Thomas Jefferson

Quote Bullet

An unexamined life is not worth living.
Socrates

Quote Bullet

And in the end, it's not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years.
Abraham Lincoln

Quote Bullet

And thou wilt give thyself relief, if thou doest every act of thy life as if it were the last.
Marcus Aurelius

Quote Bullet

Anything for the quick life, as the man said when he took the situation at the lighthouse.
Charles Dickens

Quote Bullet

Attack life, it's going to kill you anyway.
Steven Coallier

Quote Bullet

Be a life long or short, its completeness depends on what it was lived for.
David Starr Jordan

Quote Bullet

Be glad of life because it gives you a chance to love and to work and to play and to look up at stars.
Henry Van Dyke

Quote Bullet

Be not afraid of life. Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help create the fact.
Henry James

Quotations 1 to 20 of 519


Next Last

Friday, May 16, 2008

Does the universe have a purpose?

This is the first in a series of conversations about the “Big Questions” the John Templeton Foundation
is conducting among leading scientists and scholars.

Lawrence M. Krauss is Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Case Western Reserve University.
David Gelernter is a professor of computer science at Yale and a National fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
Paul Davies is a physicist, cosmologist, and astrobiologist. He is the director of the Beyond Center at Arizona State University.

Peter William Atkins is a Fellow and professor of chemistry at Lincoln College, Oxford.
Nancey Murphy is Professor of Christian Philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary.
Owen Gingerich is Professor Emeritus of Astronomy and of the History of Science at Harvard University and a senior astronomer emeritus at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.

Bruno Guiderdoni is an astrophysicist and the Director of the Observatory of Lyon, France.
Christian de Duve is a biochemist. He received the 1974 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine.
John F. Haught is Senior Fellow, Science & Religion, at the Woodstock Theological Center, Georgetown University.

Neil deGrasse Tyson is an astrophysicist and the Director of New York City's Hayden Planetarium.
Jane Goodall is the founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and a UN Messenger of Peace.
Elie Wiesel is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities and University Professor at Boston

John Templeton Foundation
BIG Questions

The Foundation has sponsored three online exchanges on questions that illuminate our philanthropic mission.

. Join the conversation»

Monday, April 28, 2008

FP: The Top 100 Public Intellectuals

Foreign Policy Magazine
May/June 2008

.
Want to help choose the world’s top public intellectuals?
Place your votes at:
.


They are some of the world’s most introspective philosophers and rabble-rousing clerics. A few write searing works of fiction and uncover the mysteries of the human mind. Others are at the forefront of modern finance, politics, and human rights. In the second Foreign Policy/Prospect list of top public intellectuals, we reveal the thinkers who are shaping the tenor of our time.



We chose the first 100. Now, it’s your chance to choose who should receive top honors by voting for the world’s top five public intellectuals. The list of the Top 20 Public Intellectuals—based on your votes—will be published in our July/August issue.



Here’s how to vote:

1. Choose your five top intellectuals in the ballot below by clicking on an individual’s name. (If you are unfamiliar with any of our picks, just check out their bios.) To undo a pick, simply click the box again.


2. Write in a candidate. Who should we have included, but did not? Click the “Write in a candidate” option at the bottom of the ballot, and let us know who we missed.


3. Submit your votes.



You may only vote once. Voting closes May 15.

Criteria: Although the men and women on this list are some of the world’s most sophisticated thinkers, the criteria to make the list could not be more simple. Candidates must be living and still active in public life. They must have shown distinction in their particular field as well as an ability to influence wider debate, often far beyond the borders of their own country.

.
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4262.
.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Famous Quotes by Goethe (313 Quotations)

Famous Quotes by Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (313 Quotations)
1749-1832, German Poet, Dramatist, Novelist

Quote Bullet

A clever man commits no minor blunders.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Mistakes]

Quote Bullet

A collections of anecdotes and maxims is the greatest of treasures for the man of the world, for he knows how to intersperse conversation with the former in fit places, and to recollect the latter on proper occasions.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Proverbs]

Quote Bullet

A creation of importance can only be produced when its author isolates himself, it is a child of solitude.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Creativity]

Quote Bullet

A distracted existence leads us to no goal.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Goals]

Quote Bullet

A great revolution is never the fault of the people, but of the government.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Revolutions and Revolutionaries]

Quote Bullet

A great scholar is seldom a great philosopher.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Scholars and Scholarship]

Quote Bullet

A judge who cannot punish, in the end associates themselves with the criminal.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Justice]

Quote Bullet

A person can stand almost anything except a succession of ordinary days.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Retirement]

Quote Bullet

A person hears only what they understand.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Listening]

Quote Bullet

A person is never happy till their vague strivings has itself marked out its proper limitations.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Happiness]

Quote Bullet

A person places themselves on a level with the ones they praise.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Self-esteem]

Quote Bullet

A purpose you impart is no longer your own.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Purpose]

Quote Bullet

A really great talent finds its happiness in execution.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Talent]

Quote Bullet

A useless life is an early death.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Death and Dying]

Quote Bullet

Age does not make us childish, as some say; it finds us true children.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Age and Aging]

Quote Bullet

All that is noble is in itself of a quiet nature, and appears to sleep until it is aroused and summoned forth by contrast.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Aristocracy]

Quote Bullet

All the knowledge I possess everyone else can acquire, but my heart is all my own.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Emotions]

Quote Bullet

All truly wise thoughts have been thoughts already thousands of times; but to make them truly ours, we must think them over again honestly, till they take root in our personal experience.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Thoughts and Thinking]

Quote Bullet

Ambition and love are the wings to great deeds.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Deeds and Good Deeds]

Quote Bullet

Anecdotes and maxims are rich treasures to the man of the world, for he knows how to introduce the former at fit place in conversation.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Quotations]


Quote Bullet

Art is long, life short, judgment difficult, opportunity transient.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Arts and Artists]

Quote Bullet

As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Trust]

Quote Bullet

Austere perseverance, hash and continuous... rarely fails of its purpose, for its silent power grows irresistible greater with time.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Perseverance]

Quote Bullet

Be above it! Make the world serve your purpose, but do not serve it.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Purpose]

Quote Bullet

Be generous with kindly words, especially about those who are absent.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Words]

Quote Bullet

Be he a king or a peasant, he is happiest who finds peace at home.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Home]

Quote Bullet

Beauty is a manifestation of secret natural laws, which otherwise would have been hidden from us forever.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Beauty]

Quote Bullet

Beauty is a primeval phenomenon, which itself never makes its appearance, but the reflection of which is visible in a thousand different utterances of the creative mind, and is as various as nature herself.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Beauty]

Quote Bullet

Beauty is everywhere a welcome guest.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Beauty]

Quote Bullet

Before you can do something you must first be something.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Action]

Quote Bullet

Behavior is the mirror in which everyone shows their image
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Behavior]

Quote Bullet

By seeking and blundering we learn.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Research]

Quote Bullet

Certain defects are necessary for the existence of individuality.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Faults]

Quote Bullet

Certain flaws are necessary for the whole. It would seem strange if old friends lacked certain quirks.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Flaws]

Quote Bullet

Character develops itself in the stream of life.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Character]

Quote Bullet

Character is formed in the stormy billows of the world.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Character]

Quote Bullet

Character, in great and little things, means carrying through what you feel able to do.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Character]

Quote Bullet

Clever people are always the best conversations lexicon.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Intelligence and Intellectuals]

Quote Bullet

Common sense is the genius of humanity.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Common Sense]

Quote Bullet

Correction does much, but encouragement does more. Encouragement after censure is as the sun after a shower.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Encouragement]

Quote Bullet

Courage and modesty are the most unequivocal of virtues, for they are of a kind that hypocrisy cannot imitate; they too have this quality in common, that they are expressed by the same color.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Courage]

Quote Bullet

Daring ideas are like chessmen moved forward. They may be beaten, but they may start a winning game.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Ideas]

Quote Bullet

Death is a commingling of eternity with time; in the death of a good man, eternity is seen looking through time.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Death and Dying]

Quote Bullet

Deeply earnest and thoughtful people stand on shaky footing with the public.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Public]

Quote Bullet

Deny yourself! You must deny yourself! That is the song that never ends.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Denial]

Quote Bullet

Difficulties increase the nearer we approach the goal.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Goals]

Quote Bullet

Do not give in too much to feelings. A overly sensitive heart is an unhappy possession on this shaky earth.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Feelings]

Quote Bullet

Don't dissipate your powers; strive to concentrate them. Genius thinks it can do whatever it sees others doing, but it will surely repent of every ill-judged outlay.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Focus]

Quote Bullet

Doubt can only be removed by action.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Doubt]

Quote Bullet

Dream no small dreams for they have no power to move the hearts of men.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Dreams]

Quote Bullet

Enjoy what thou has inherited from thy sires if thou wouldn't really possess it. What we employ and use is never an oppressive burden; what the moment brings forth, that only can it profit by.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Enjoyment]

Quote Bullet

Every author in some degree portrays himself in his works, even if it be against his will.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Writers and Writing]

Quote Bullet

Every man has enough power left to carry out that of which he is convinced.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Power]

Quote Bullet

Every offense is avenged on earth.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Justice]

Quote Bullet

Every person above the ordinary has a certain mission that they are called to fulfill.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Purpose]

Quote Bullet

Every situation, every moment -- is of infinite worth; for it is the representative of a whole eternity.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Eternity]

Quote Bullet

Every spoken word arouses our self-will.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Words]

Quote Bullet

Everybody wants to be somebody; nobody wants to grow.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Change]

Quote Bullet

Everything has been thought of before, but the problem is to think of it again.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Quotations]

Quote Bullet

Everything in the world may be endured except continual prosperity.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe - [Prosperity]

Quotations 1 to 60 of 313


Next Last

Monday, March 03, 2008

20th Century (Western) Philosophers - Videos

.
.
.
..

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Some Sociologists and Their Ideas

The University of Amsterdam
.
Addams, J. * Adorno, Th. W. * Aron, R. * Baudrillard, J. * Becker, H. * Bell, D. * Benedict, R.F. * Berger, P. L. * Bhaskar, R. * Blau, P. * Blumer, H. * Boltanski, L. * Boudon, R. * Bourdieu, P. * Coleman, J.A. * Collins, R. * Comte, A. * Cooley, Ch. H. * Coser, L. * Crompton, R. * Crozier, M. * Dahrendorf, R. * Du Bois, W.E.B * Durkheim, E. * Elias, N. * Elster, J. * Etzioni, A. * Ferguson, A. * Foucault, M. * Fromm, E. * Garfinkel, H. * Geertz, C. * Geiger, Th. * Giddens, A. * Goffman, E. * Goudsblom, J. * Gouldner, A.W. * Gramsci, A. * Habermas, J. * Halbwachs, M. * Hall, S. * Haraway, D.J. * Homans, G.C. * Horkheimer, M. * Inglehart, R. * Kanter E. M. * Kearl, M. * König, R. * Latour, B. * Lefebvre, H. * Lenski, G. * Lévi-Strauss, C. * Luckmann, Th. * Luhmann, N. * Malinowski, B. * Mann, M. * Mannheim, K. * Marcuse, H. * Marx, K. * Mauss, M. * McLuhan, M * Mead, G. H. * Mead, M. * Merton, R. K. * Michels, R. * Millett, K. * Mills, C. W. * Moreno, J. L. * Morgan, L. H. * Offe, C. * Pareto, V. * Park, R.E. * Parsons, T. * Popper, K. * Rousseau, J.-J. * Schütz, A. * Simmel, G. * Sorokin, P.A. * Spencer, H. * Taylor, W.F. * Thomas, W.I. * Tocqueville, A. de * Toffler, A. * Tönnies, F. * Touraine, A. * Toynbee, A. * Veblen, T. * Walby, S. * Wallerstein, I. * Wald, L.F. * Weber, Max * Willis, Paul * Znaniecki, F.W.
.
.

Monday, January 02, 2006

How Did We Think in the Last Millennium?

Closer to Truth brings together leading scientists, scholars and artists to debate the fundamental issues of our times. Get Closer To Truth with the public television series, companion book, home videos, audiotapes, this Web site and the unique HyperForum. [more]
.
WHAT will the new millennium bring? To forecast the future, we should process the past. The last thousand years have been astonishing in their extremes. Humanity was wondrously transformed--from knights on horseback to kids on computers--but the price paid was very high. So much collective suffering; so much individual agony. If how we think helps to define how we live, then it should be useful to look at the thought processes that led to the triumphs, as well as the ravages, of civilization. Our future may depend on our ability to think, and perhaps think differently than we have in the past. So let's attempt to understand the nature of thinking itself--rational versus creative thinking; deductive versus inductive thinking; logic versus perception; analysis versus synthesis; game theory, heuristics, algorithms, the "expert systems" of artificial intelligence. What does each contribute to our intellectual and material advancement, and how do they further (or inhibit) our personal, social and political relations? If we can think more clearly, shouldn't we be able to live more happily? Understanding thinking--its categories and applications--is the specialty of our panel. What's particularly interesting is how the diversity of their fields affects the direction of their thinking.
.
PARTICIPANTS
Robert Lawrence Kuhn is the creator and host of the Closer To Truth television series and author of the Closer To Truth book. Trained in brain research (Ph.D. UCLA), he has published more than twenty books, including the Handbook for Creative and Innovative Managers and the seven-volume Library of Investment Banking. He is the president of The Geneva Companies, a leading merger and acquisition firm for private, middle market businesses.
.
Edward de Bono, author of over fifty books, including Lateral Thinking: Creativity Step by Step and De Bono's Thinking Course, is an international authority in both creative thinking and the direct teaching of thinking. Edward calls for design, synthesis, and creativity in human thinking.
.
Dr. Edward Feigenbaum, a professor of computer science at Stanford, is often called the father of expert systems, which are software programs that incorporate the best human thinking. Ed explains how artificial intelligence can assist our thinking.
.
Graham T.T. Molitor, a prolific author about the future, is vice president and legal counsel of the World Future Society. Graham believes that our brains will ultimately be enhanced through advances in genetics and neuroscience.
.
Dr. Sherwin (Shep) Nuland, a surgeon and medical ethicist at Yale University School of Medicine, is the author of How We Die, a poetic book describing the end of the human lifecycle. Shep sees human beings as mostly irrational by nature.
.
Dr. Brian Skyrms, a professor of philosophy and social science at the University of California at Irvine, is the author of Evolution of the Social Contract. Brian examines the nature and tools of thinking
.
ROBERT: Edward, you've taught creativity and thinking to schools and corporations throughout the world. What are your notions about how we handled these matters over the last millennium? Why such extremes?
.
EDWARD DE BONO: On the whole, our thinking has been rather disastrous. The three Greeks--Plato, Aristotle, Socrates--really wrecked Western thinking, which has been concerned only with truth, analysis, judgment, argument. This type of thinking has led to persecutions, wars, discrimination, pogroms. What we've left out is "What can be?" thinking. "What can be?" thinking is design, creativity, synthesis--putting things together to achieve something new. We've had a very limited thinking system--a system excellent in itself, but only as the front left wheel of a motor car is excellent. By itself, it's inadequate.
.
ROBERT: Ed, how can so-called expert systems help us understand human thinking?
.
ED FEIGENBAUM: Expert systems are part of a field in computer science called artificial intelligence, wherein scientists and engineers are attempting to create models of human thinking, primarily the models of thinking that Edward [De Bono] was just calling "the front left wheel" of the automobile--namely, logical thinking. Expert systems are attempts to model the knowledge and the expertise of first-class human professionals [for example, physicians], who are practicing their professions at very high levels of performance. This relates to the ultimate goal of artificial intelligence: to generate programs that are extremely intelligent--that is, beyond human capability.
...
.
ROBERT: CONCLUDING COMMENT
.
SO how do we assess the last millennium? Often the smarter we got, it seems, the stupider we acted. Rational, linear thought produced the most efficient social advancement, but also the most destructive human debasement. This is what happens when value-free analysis serves the capricious whims of conventional human nature. You get amplification: good gets better but bad gets worse. Genocide has frequently occurred alongside the most advanced science, several of the worst examples in our own twentieth century. So if we continue to be arrogant, bigoted, greedy and jingoistic, then rational thinking will continue to generate maximal trauma. Rational thinking makes good technology, but our cognitive processes must grow in order for humanity to prosper. Human thinking must change. We need novel, original ideas that can enable us to leap beyond the traditional boundaries of inquiry and establish new standards of value creation. We need synergy and harmony between rational and postrational thinking, the left and right wheels of our mental motor car working together. Our thinking must become creative and holistic as well as analytic and diagnostic. Try this combination of both kinds of thinking in your personal life, and your decision making will undoubtedly improve. It is the best thinking that brings us closer to truth.
.
Full-text available, click here.
.

Friday, December 09, 2005

The Flight from Reality in the Human Sciences

Ian Shapiro, Yale University
Princeton University Press, 2005
.
Introduction [HTML]
.
In this captivating yet troubling book, Ian Shapiro offers a searing indictment of many influential practices in the social sciences and humanities today. Perhaps best known for his critique of rational choice theory, Shapiro expands his purview here. In discipline after discipline, he argues, scholars have fallen prey to inward-looking myopia that results from--and perpetuates--a flight from reality.

In the method-driven academic culture we inhabit, argues Shapiro, researchers too often make display and refinement of their techniques the principal scholarly activity. The result is that they lose sight of the objects of their study. Pet theories and methodological blinders lead unwelcome facts to be ignored, sometimes not even perceived. The targets of Shapiro's critique include the law and economics movement, overzealous formal and statistical modeling, various reductive theories of human behavior, misguided conceptual analysis in political theory, and the Cambridge school of intellectual history.

As an alternative to all of these, Shapiro makes a compelling case for problem-driven social research, rooted in a realist philosophy of science and an antireductionist view of social explanation. In the lucid--if biting--prose for which Shapiro is renowned, he explains why this requires greater critical attention to how problems are specified than is usually undertaken. He illustrates what is at stake for the study of power, democracy, law, and ideology, as well as in normative debates over rights, justice, freedom, virtue, and community. Shapiro answers many critics of his views along the way, securing his position as one of the distinctive social and political theorists of our time.

Ian Shapiro is Sterling Professor of Political Science at Yale University, where he also serves as Henry R. Luce Director of the Yale Center for International and Area Studies. Among his many books are The State of Democratic Theory and, with Michael J. Graetz, Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Fight over Taxing Inherited Wealth (Princeton); and The Moral Foundations of Politics.

Endorsements:
"Ian Shapiro's work has inspired a generation of both scholars and practitioners of politics--for the simple reason that he meets the standards of the former and the needs of the latter. In this book, he helps rescue the study of politics and society from moralists, who believe individuals have more control over their fates than history or economics would support, and from those scientists who view human behavior as mechanistic. He is a theoretician with solid grounding in the real world, a master-observer of the human capacity that is at the heart of the best and worst in political and social life--and everything in between: choice. He writes with a clarity that is refreshing as well as redolent of the confidence he rightly feels in his own judgments."--Strobe Talbott, President of the Brookings Institution

"With his characteristic boldness and insight, Ian Shapiro surveys the reigning theories in the social sciences and finds them wanting. A superb collection of essays from a trenchant critic."--Joyce Appleby, Professor Emerita of History, University of California, Los Angeles, author of Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination

"Informed by normative political theory and the philosophy of science, and grounded in a deep knowledge of empirical studies in political science, Ian Shapiro's essays raise fundamental questions for those in all the disciplines--including law--who seek to understand and explain social behavior in the construction of decent public institutions."--Mark Tushnet, Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Constitutional Law, Georgetown University

"It is always a pleasure to read Ian Shapiro's reflections on political theory, the methodology of political science, and on the state of the discipline. He is sceptical but not cynical, he is critical without malice, and he laces his insights with a dry wit that makes some sometimes quite tough argumentation unusually digestible. It is good to have these pieces so conveniently assembled in one place."--Alan Ryan, New College, Oxford

"This is an important book for two main reasons. First, its central argument is, undoubtedly, correct. Recent methodological advances in the social sciences, combined with pressures from increased professionalization, have rendered epidemic the 'pathologies' that are the book's subject. Second, Shapiro is one of only a handful of scholars who have drawn social scientists' attention to these problems. The tightly argued essays that comprise the book are written in a clear, jargon-free prose that will make them accessible to scholars across a range of fields and disciplines."--Clarissa Rile Hayward, Ohio State University, author of De-Facing Power

"This lucid, brilliant, and beautifully written volume of essays contributes substantially to our understanding of the philosophy and practice of research in the human sciences. Anyone undertaking such research, or interested in its results, will want to read it."--Elisabeth Ellis, Texas A&M University, author of Kant's Politics: Provisional Theory for an Uncertain World

Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments ix
INTRODUCTION: Fear of Not Flying 1
CHAPTER ONE: The Difference That Realism Makes: Social Science and the Politics of Consent by Ian Shapiro and Alexander Wendt 19
CHAPTER TWO: Revisiting the Pathologies of Rational Choice by Donald Green and Ian Shapiro 51CHAPTER THREE: Richard Posner's Praxis 100
CHAPTER FOUR: Gross Concepts in Political Argument 152
CHAPTER FIVE: Problems, Methods, and Theories in the Study of Politics: Or, What's Wrong with Political Science and What to Do about It 178
CHAPTER SIX: The Political Science Discipline: A Comment on David Laitin 204
Index 213
.
.