Pragmatic Humanism

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antihumanism
Author_Marcus Morgan
Capital Volume Iii
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Category=JHB
Category=JHBA
Category=QD
DNA Manipulation
epistemology
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ethical sociology
Exhuming Humanism
Genetic Enhancement
Heteronomous Influences
hope
Hope's Relationship
Hope’s Relationship
humanism
Humanistic Account
Humanistic Sociology
Irena Sendler
Marcus Morgan
moral philosophy critique
Mythical Phoenix
Objective Social Change
Oxford Amnesty Lecture
philosophy of the social sciences
Phronetic Social Science
political implications in social science
Poststructuralist Social Theory
pragmatic approach to sociological ethics
Pragmatic Humanism
pragmatism
Public Engagement
Radicalised Pragmatism
Rigorous Reflexivity
Rorty's Defence
social epistemology
Social Hope
social theory
Sociological Ethics
Sociological Knowledge
sociological responsibility
Strategic Universalism
Substitute End
Towards an alternative valuation of sociology
transformative knowledge
Twentieth Century Social Theory
value of the social sciences

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815351412
  • Weight: 312g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Is sociology best understood as simply chipping away at our ignorance about society, or does it have broader roles and responsibilities? If so, to what—or perhaps to whom—are these responsibilities? Installing humanity as its epistemological and normative start and endpoint, this book shows how humanism recasts sociology as an activity that does not merely do things, or effect things, but is also self-consciously for something.

Rather than resurrecting problematic classical conceptions of humanism, the book instead constructs its arguments on pragmatic grounds, showing how a pragmatic humanism presents an improved picture of both the nature and value of the discipline. This picture is based less around the claim that sociology is capable of providing authoritative revelations about society, and more upon its capacity to offer representations of the social in epistemologically open, transformative, ethical, and hopeful ways.

Ultimately, it argues that sociology’s real value can only be disclosed by replacing its image as a discipline aimed towards disinterested social enlightenment with one of itself as a practice both dependent upon, and at its best self-consciously aimed towards, human ends and imperatives. It will appeal to scholars and students across the social sciences, and to those working in social theory, sociology, and philosophy of the social sciences in particular.

Marcus Morgan is a Research Associate in the Sociology Department at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow and College Lecturer at Murray Edwards College, Cambridge. He is the author, with Patrick Baert, of Conflict in the Academy: A Study in the Sociology of Intellectuals.

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