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3
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0039027078
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The Disciplines of Nature and the Nature of Disciplines
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E. Messer-Davidow, D.R. Shumway, and D.J. Sylvan, Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia
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Timothy Lenoir, "The Disciplines of Nature and the Nature of Disciplines," in E. Messer-Davidow, D.R. Shumway, and D.J. Sylvan (eds), Knowledges: Historical and Critical Studies in Disciplinarity (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1993), p. 75.
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(1993)
Knowledges: Historical and Critical Studies In Disciplinarity
, pp. 75
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Lenoir, T.1
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6
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0003704106
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Albany, NY: SUNY Press
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Robert Seidelman and Edward J. Harpham, Disenchanted Realists: Political Science and the American Crisis, 1884-1984 (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1985), p. 241.
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(1985)
Disenchanted Realists: Political Science and The American Crisis, 1884-1984
, pp. 241
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Seidelman, R.1
Harpham, E.J.2
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7
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84881579022
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Note
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Many external forces affect how political science is regarded in the university, which political scientists must manage to maintain, or improve, their symbolic and material status in struggles for resources. So the symbolic aspirations and organizational economies of university administrators cannot be ignored as influences in the evolution of knowledge definition, production, and valorization in American political science, particularly as universities have developed since the 1950s. Natural science disciplines remain the most highly prized by the economy and society. Hence, other disciplines, like political science, rush to compete with these colleagues to gain the same status as the life, mathematical, and physical science disciplines by adopting natural science models of knowledge.
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8
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84881605322
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Note
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On one level, granting even provisionally that there is a stable, certain, and definitive analytical formation in the natural science model suggests there is a widespread presumption that methodological consensus and clarity about the natural sciences actually exists. On a second level, the natural science model functions as a stable normative ideal, which is folded together out of innumerable hazy opinions about what some political scientists actually imagine their practices truly "are," because in their minds their methods actually match this mythic model of science. On a third level, conforming to such scientific ideals, in turn, leads political science departments, and professional organizations constructing a vague professional consensus to associate as a weak operational community known as "American political science" whose unity and quiddity are, in fact, tenuous at best. Yet, these sociological pressures still seem to serve the interests of this academic discipline as an intellectual project, although its students and teachers increasingly are "academically adrift."
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18
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84933492957
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The State in Political Science: How We Became What We Study
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March
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Theodore Lowi, "The State in Political Science: How We Became What We Study," American Political Science Review 86 (March 1992), pp. 1-7.
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(1992)
American Political Science Review
, vol.86
, pp. 1-7
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Lowi, T.1
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20
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84884956055
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Making Political Science Matter: Debating Knowledge
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New York: New York University Press
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Stuart Schram and Brian Caterino (eds), Making Political Science Matter: Debating Knowledge, Research and Method (New York: New York University Press, 2006).
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(2006)
Research and Method
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Schram, S.1
Caterino, B.2
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21
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0002626298
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What is Enlightenment
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Paul Rabinow (ed.), New York: Pantheon
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Michel Foucault, "What is Enlightenment," in Paul Rabinow (ed.), The Foucault Reader (New York: Pantheon, 1984), p. 29.
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(1984)
The Foucault Reader
, pp. 29
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Foucault, M.1
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24
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0004065359
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Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
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Ian Hacking, The Social Construction of What? (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), pp. 24-25.
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(1999)
The Social Construction of What?
, pp. 24-25
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Hacking, I.1
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27
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0004015656
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Husserl sketches out a similar critique in his phenomenological writings (1960; 1968), which figures most prominently in his unfinished last work, (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press)
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Husserl sketches out a similar critique in his phenomenological writings (1960; 1968), which figures most prominently in his unfinished last work, The Crisis of European Science (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1970).
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(1970)
The Crisis of European Science
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60
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85014751759
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The Discipline as Disciplinary Normalization: Networks of Research
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Timothy W. Luke, "The Discipline as Disciplinary Normalization: Networks of Research," New Political Science 21:3 (1999), pp. 345-363.
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(1999)
New Political Science
, vol.21
, Issue.3
, pp. 345-363
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Luke, T.W.1
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64
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4344593956
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Myths about the Physical Sciences and Their Implications for Teaching Political Science
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July
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Kim Quaile Hill, "Myths about the Physical Sciences and Their Implications for Teaching Political Science," PS: Political Science & Politics, 37 (July 2004), pp. 467-476.
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(2004)
PS: Political Science & Politics
, vol.37
, pp. 467-476
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Hill, K.Q.1
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66
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0040711993
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Disciplinary Boundaries and the Rhetoric of the Social Sciences
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E. Messer-Davidow, D.R. Shumway, and D.J. Sylvan, Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia
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Steve Fuller, "Disciplinary Boundaries and the Rhetoric of the Social Sciences," in E. Messer-Davidow, D.R. Shumway, and D.J. Sylvan (eds), Knowledges: Historical and Critical Studies in Disciplinarity (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1993), p. 139.
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(1993)
Knowledges: Historical and Critical Studies In Disciplinarity
, pp. 139
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Fuller, S.1
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75
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0001706315
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Afterword: The Subject and Power
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in Herbert L. Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
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Michel Foucault, "Afterword: The Subject and Power," in Herbert L. Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow (eds), Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1982), pp. 208-226.
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(1982)
Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics
, pp. 208-226
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Foucault, M.1
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77
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84937184417
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From Body Politics to Body Shops: Power, Subjectivity, and the Body in an Era of Global Capitalism
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Timothy W. Luke, "From Body Politics to Body Shops: Power, Subjectivity, and the Body in an Era of Global Capitalism," Current Perspectives in Social Theory 19 (1999), pp. 91-116.
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(1999)
Current Perspectives In Social Theory
, vol.19
, pp. 91-116
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Luke, T.W.1
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79
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80054250776
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Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press
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Steven Shapin and Steven Schaffer, Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and The Experimental Life (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1985)
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(1985)
Leviathan and The Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and The Experimental Life
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Shapin, S.1
Schaffer, S.2
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85
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84881576241
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Note
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Galileo's imaginative construction of both celestial motion and terrestrial mechanics through mathematical operations performs vital roles. With regard to the substance and form of nature, "by idealizing the world of bodies in respect to which has spatiotemporal shape in this world, it created ideal objects. Out of the undetermined universal form of the life-world, space and time, and the manifold of empirical intuitable shapes that can be imagined into it, it made for the first time an objective world in the true sense-i.e., an infinite totality of ideal objects which are determinable univocally, methodically, and quite universally for everyone. Thus mathematics showed for the first time that an infinity of objects that are subjectively relative and are thought only in a vague, general representation is, through an a priori all-encompassing method, objectively determinable and can actually be thought as determined, decided in advance, in itself, in respect to all its objects and all their properties and relations. It can be thought in this way precisely because it is constructible ex datis in its objectively true being-in-itself, through its method which is not just postulated but is actually created, apodictically generated" (Husserl, Crisis, p. 32).With these roots, the ontography of mathematicization writes out meaning in the life world, and leaves the specificities of the sensory adrift in the technicization, mechanization, and instrumentalization of method.
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87
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0004023926
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Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
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Michel Foucault, Language, Counter Memory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 146.
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(1977)
Language, Counter Memory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews
, pp. 146
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Foucault, M.1
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99
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84881575267
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Note
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KKV's systemic construction of naturalized objectivity also allows the expressions of now "objectively natural" forces and forms to transmogrify ontic substances.
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100
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84881584203
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Note
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That is, geometric ideals abstracted from nature as such become applied geometries in/for/about nature. Developing natural scientific research practices for society then constitutes with modernity, as modernity, and alongside modernity, "a general method for knowing the real"
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102
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0004026478
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Bruno Latour, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
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Bruno Latour, The Pasteurization of France (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1988)
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(1988)
The Pasteurization of France
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103
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0004005686
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Bruno Latour, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
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Bruno Latour, Science in Action (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987).
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(1987)
Science In Action
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105
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0004155776
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Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press
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Neil Evernden, The Social Creation of Nature (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 60.
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(1992)
The Social Creation of Nature
, pp. 60
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Evernden, N.1
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107
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0004092356
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Pierre Bourdieu, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
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Pierre Bourdieu, Language & Symbolic Power (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993).
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(1993)
Language & Symbolic Power
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109
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0003626537
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New York: Random House
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Michel Foucault, History of Sexuality, Vol. I: An Interaction (New York: Random House, 1978), pp. 105-106.
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(1978)
History of Sexuality
, pp. 105-106
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Foucault, M.1
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110
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84881582933
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Note
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Galileo's operational notions of dynamics and statics trace nature's inferred and observed mechanics. From Galileo in astronomical and terrestrial physics to Hobbes in psychology and politics, the ultimate test of natural philosophy is shaped knowledge of material effects by mapping their causes. The pictorializations of data, the verifiable exactness of fitting hypotheses to data, and the respecification of new hypotheses against this mechanistic horizon of methodological rigor also are KKV's ideals for analytical accomplishment. Such idealizations of machinic spatio-temporality in the world culminate in the twentieth-century's valorization of physics by modern research universities as the normative ideal of "big science," "good research," or "valid explanations." By these discursive devotions, geometry contours history as social reification; and, method as/or/ about the true knowledge of "what is under research," is twisted toward measuring reified social relations in the embedded mechanisms written out through the natural science ontography and epistemography.
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111
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84974224075
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The Progress of Political Science
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John Dryzek, "The Progress of Political Science," Journal of Politics 48 (1988), pp. 301-320.
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(1988)
Journal of Politics
, vol.48
, pp. 301-320
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Dryzek, J.1
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118
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84971706854
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History and Discipline in Political Science
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John Dryzek and Stephen Leonard, "History and Discipline in Political Science," American Political Science Review 82 (1988), pp. 145-160.
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(1988)
American Political Science Review
, vol.82
, pp. 145-160
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Dryzek, J.1
Leonard, S.2
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125
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0003984746
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Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
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Pierre Bourdieu, Outline of a Theory of Practice (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1977), p. 79.
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(1977)
Outline of a Theory of Practice
, pp. 79
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Bourdieu, P.1
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126
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84881599563
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Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
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Karl Hübner, Critique of Scientific Reason (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1983).
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(1983)
Critique of Scientific Reason
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Karl, H.1
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131
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and the contributions to this New Political Science issue
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Monroe, Perestroika! and the contributions to this New Political Science issue.
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Perestroika
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Monroe1
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132
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The Specificity of the Scientific Field and the Social Conditions of the Progress of Reason
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Pierre Bourdieu, "The Specificity of the Scientific Field and the Social Conditions of the Progress of Reason," Social Science Information 14 (1975), p. 19.
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(1975)
Social Science Information
, vol.14
, pp. 19
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Bourdieu, P.1
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