Barry Taylor
- Published in print:
- 2006
- Published Online:
- September 2006
- ISBN:
- 9780199286690
- eISBN:
- 9780191604065
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- DOI:
- 10.1093/0199286698.003.0007
- Subject:
- Philosophy, Metaphysics/Epistemology
This chapter discusses formal theories of truth: the redundancy theory and its ilk, distinguished by the attempt to characterize truth in terms of its structural properties, in the context of the ...
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This chapter discusses formal theories of truth: the redundancy theory and its ilk, distinguished by the attempt to characterize truth in terms of its structural properties, in the context of the position adopted by Putnam in his John Dewey Lectures, here styled ‘Common-sense Realism’. This position is described, combining two principles called the Thesis of the Internality (according to which the elements of a representational system are internally related to their content) and the Thesis of World-Embeddedness (which holds that content is dependent on the world in a more than causal way), with a formal account of truth. It is argued that Common-sense Realism, along with all theories comprising a formal account of truth, should be committed to the flames, because they are cut off from exploiting the Fregean model of meaning, based on a recursion on truth.Less
This chapter discusses formal theories of truth: the redundancy theory and its ilk, distinguished by the attempt to characterize truth in terms of its structural properties, in the context of the position adopted by Putnam in his John Dewey Lectures, here styled ‘Common-sense Realism’. This position is described, combining two principles called the Thesis of the Internality (according to which the elements of a representational system are internally related to their content) and the Thesis of World-Embeddedness (which holds that content is dependent on the world in a more than causal way), with a formal account of truth. It is argued that Common-sense Realism, along with all theories comprising a formal account of truth, should be committed to the flames, because they are cut off from exploiting the Fregean model of meaning, based on a recursion on truth.
Thilo Jungkind
- Published in print:
- 2015
- Published Online:
- May 2015
- ISBN:
- 9781781381373
- eISBN:
- 9781781384886
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Liverpool University Press
- DOI:
- 10.5949/liverpool/9781781381373.003.0005
- Subject:
- Business and Management, Business History
Modern Business History should be inspired from theoretical approaches of social sciences. According to the topic of the book, two economic-sociological approaches are presented. They can be used for ...
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Modern Business History should be inspired from theoretical approaches of social sciences. According to the topic of the book, two economic-sociological approaches are presented. They can be used for writing an academically oriented Business History as well as a corporation oriented one. Both approaches support Business Archivists writing their history in interdependence to the surrounding society. First the text will tackle the "embeddedness-theory", introduced by Marc Granovetter in the mid 1980’s. Granovetter highlighted links in between social structure and economic action. He argued that these networks and all incorporated agents are permanently negotiating their interests. Furthermore, the article focuses on the "neo-institutional organisation" theory. The hypothesis of this is that social and cultural environment affects all business strategy and operations. Decision makers deliberate these expectations. Due to them they act or they do not. Social structures, expectations, and their influence on business can only be measured in an historical perspective.Less
Modern Business History should be inspired from theoretical approaches of social sciences. According to the topic of the book, two economic-sociological approaches are presented. They can be used for writing an academically oriented Business History as well as a corporation oriented one. Both approaches support Business Archivists writing their history in interdependence to the surrounding society. First the text will tackle the "embeddedness-theory", introduced by Marc Granovetter in the mid 1980’s. Granovetter highlighted links in between social structure and economic action. He argued that these networks and all incorporated agents are permanently negotiating their interests. Furthermore, the article focuses on the "neo-institutional organisation" theory. The hypothesis of this is that social and cultural environment affects all business strategy and operations. Decision makers deliberate these expectations. Due to them they act or they do not. Social structures, expectations, and their influence on business can only be measured in an historical perspective.
Claus Thomasberger
- Published in print:
- 2020
- Published Online:
- January 2021
- ISBN:
- 9781526127884
- eISBN:
- 9781526155450
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
- DOI:
- 10.7765/9781526127891.00015
- Subject:
- Philosophy, Political Philosophy
In the last decades, Karl Polanyi has gained recognition as one of the most important social scientists of the twentieth century. His seminal book, The Great Transformation, is listed among ...
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In the last decades, Karl Polanyi has gained recognition as one of the most important social scientists of the twentieth century. His seminal book, The Great Transformation, is listed among twentieth- century classics. How can this book, written more than seventy-five years ago, be applied to the current conditions? In order to answer this question the chapter not only compares the civilization of the nineteenth century in Europe with our own epoch. It also reconstructs some of Polanyi’s most important insights, such as his critique of the liberal utopia (in its classical and neoliberal version), his interpretation of the double movement, his vision of the meaning of the industrial revolution, his understanding of the problem of freedom in a complex society and his idea of a necessary ‘reform of human consciousness’. The chapter closes with a discussion of the question of how Polanyi’s categories can be used fruitfully so as to throw light to the post-war era and our society today.Less
In the last decades, Karl Polanyi has gained recognition as one of the most important social scientists of the twentieth century. His seminal book, The Great Transformation, is listed among twentieth- century classics. How can this book, written more than seventy-five years ago, be applied to the current conditions? In order to answer this question the chapter not only compares the civilization of the nineteenth century in Europe with our own epoch. It also reconstructs some of Polanyi’s most important insights, such as his critique of the liberal utopia (in its classical and neoliberal version), his interpretation of the double movement, his vision of the meaning of the industrial revolution, his understanding of the problem of freedom in a complex society and his idea of a necessary ‘reform of human consciousness’. The chapter closes with a discussion of the question of how Polanyi’s categories can be used fruitfully so as to throw light to the post-war era and our society today.
Jamie Peck
- Published in print:
- 2020
- Published Online:
- January 2021
- ISBN:
- 9781526127884
- eISBN:
- 9781526155450
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
- DOI:
- 10.7765/9781526127891.00021
- Subject:
- Philosophy, Political Philosophy
The chapter addresses the potential of Karl Polanyi’s contribution as a spatial theorist, or as an economic geographer in all but name. Although Polanyi did not identify as a spatial or geographical ...
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The chapter addresses the potential of Karl Polanyi’s contribution as a spatial theorist, or as an economic geographer in all but name. Although Polanyi did not identify as a spatial or geographical theorist as such, his work is rich with spatial insights and implications, notably as one of the original analysts of economic diversity. The chapter begins by contextualising Polanyi’s work in relation to the shifting locales and vantage points that shaped its production. It then turns to the question of the potential of Polanyi’s research programme (incomplete as it understandably was) for the conceptualisation and exploration of economic geographies. The goal here is to sketch some of the ways in which neoPolanyian approaches can be put to work in the service of geographically sensitive modes of economic inquiry, including those attuned to the ongoing diversity of economic formations and development trajectories, contemporary engagements with uneven spatial development, and the evaluation of (localised) economic experimentation. Polanyi’s programmatic project of ‘comparative economics’ was never completed during his own lifetime. There is much to be gained from resuming this project.Less
The chapter addresses the potential of Karl Polanyi’s contribution as a spatial theorist, or as an economic geographer in all but name. Although Polanyi did not identify as a spatial or geographical theorist as such, his work is rich with spatial insights and implications, notably as one of the original analysts of economic diversity. The chapter begins by contextualising Polanyi’s work in relation to the shifting locales and vantage points that shaped its production. It then turns to the question of the potential of Polanyi’s research programme (incomplete as it understandably was) for the conceptualisation and exploration of economic geographies. The goal here is to sketch some of the ways in which neoPolanyian approaches can be put to work in the service of geographically sensitive modes of economic inquiry, including those attuned to the ongoing diversity of economic formations and development trajectories, contemporary engagements with uneven spatial development, and the evaluation of (localised) economic experimentation. Polanyi’s programmatic project of ‘comparative economics’ was never completed during his own lifetime. There is much to be gained from resuming this project.