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基本説明
A plea to scholars of global politics to turn away from the 'manufacture' of data and to return to a systematic study of history as a basis for theory.
Full Description
Theory and History in International Relations is an eloquent plea to scholars of global politics to turn away from the "manufacture" of data and return to a systematic study of history as a basic for theory. While the modest use of empiricism will always be important, Puchala rejects the logical positivism of the so-called "scientific revolution" in the field in favor of a more complex, even intuitive, vision of global politics. He addresses the potential uses of history in studying some of the major debates of our time-the Cold War as a struggle between empires, the collision of civilizations, cultural encounters and colonies in the ancient world, and liberal approaches to the understanding of history and ethical contributions to the dialogue over theory.
Contents
1. Theory and History in International RelationsInternational Relations Theory in Perspective 3. The Pragmatics of International History 4. International Theory and Cyclical History 5. The Tragedy of War and the Search for Meaning in International History 6. The Dancing Dinosaurs of the Cold War 7. International Encounters of Another Kind 8. Colonization and Culture in the Ancient World 9. Myth, History and Morality 10. Liberal Theory and Linear History 11. Beyond the Divided Discipline