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Entries in politicology (7)

Monday
Jun052006

What is "Political Science?"

If someone asked whether political science was its own subject matter, we would need to clarify something: (1) do they mean it own activity (a methodological focus); or (2) do they simply mean its own topic of conversation? Let’s take the second one first. Clearly, political science is not distinct in what it talks about. Journalism talks about the same thing. So does history to some extent. Indeed, so do some in taverns on the weekends. But compare this to, say, statistics or engineering. Talking about these subjects seems to require its own expertise before the conversation is understood. Can you talk about engineering without first having to learn something about engineering as an activity? It is not that people in taverns do not talk about engineering, it is that, when the do, they are being “amateur” engineers. Can we say the same of political science? When plain people talk about politics, are they merely being amateur political scientists? Are journalists or historians when they talk about political phenomena just “winging it,” while the true masters of this subject dwell elsewhere? I doubt it. It seems to me that the conversation of politics is neither foreign to ordinary people or something that requires is own expertise to understand the conversation.

Having cast doubt upon the subject of whether politics is an exclusive conversation, let us consider the second question: is political science its own means of inquiry (the methods part)? That is, is political science its own intellectual or scientific craft? It seems to me that what political science is, is the application of history, political philosophy, statistics and psychology to the study of political phenomena. To be a political scientists requires you to be a little of something else. Too much of one at the expense of the others puts it in another box.

But how does this compare with other “disciplines?” History appears not to be its own topic of conversation, but it does appear to be its own craft. So, too, for psychology. But then again, I must be careful: isn’t statistics merely the borrowing of the craft of mathematics, which borrows from arithmetic? Here is the difference: statistics is a distinct kind of applied mathematics, as is, say, algebra and calculus. This is not true of political science. What it borrows is not an activity unique to itself. So the point is this: political science appears to have neither its own conversation nor its own activity. And so I must now ask: are we even a “science?” Or are we simply a collection of educated people who apply someone else’s science to an ordinary conversation?

Saturday
Jun032006

Why Doesn't Political Science Use "Emanuels?"

Why doesn’t political science have its own “Emanuels” (a popular version of a student-oriented commercial outline of what is taught in law school)? One easy answer might be that the commercial market for such a publication is poor. I do not buy this. You can find western history summaries and European history summaries in book stores. You can find micro and macro economics as well. I bet if you looked hard enough you could find one for psychology. But why no basic summary outline of the core findings of political scientists?

There appears to be only one of two answers to this question. Either political science has not produced any disciplinary “truths” that are universal among its practitioners, or the practitioners themselves are simply adverse to the transformation of  disciplinary knowledge into a concise, authoritative and hegemonic format. But again, why?

The thing that is nice about law school is its structure (to say nothing of the ridiculous educational methodology, the deficiency of its curriculum – Plumbing I, Plumbing II, etc., -- or the narrowness of its favorite intellectual aptitude). But there is no reason why political science could not take its body of intellectual contribution and put it into a format that says “this is what we know best,” and “this is still around, but not considered paradigm.” It would be just like Emanuels listing the “majority rule” and “minority rule.” An entry about the American policy process, for example, might indicate that neopluralism is the preferred view of the policy process, and that the non-preferred (“minority rules”) are elite theory, perfect pluralism and democratic theory. Ada W. Finifter is the only scholar who I know that tried to summarize disciplinary knowledge, but I think the general consensus found his work to be problematic. (Correct me if I am wrong. I only remember my dislike for the book in graduate school many years ago). Wouldn’t graduate students benefit from an Emanuels kind of product? Wouldn’t it give our endeavors more structure? Sometimes I feel that all political science wants to be is a form of “art camp.”

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