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Inquiry and change : the troubled attempt to understand and shape society / Charles E. Lindblom.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Lindblom, Charles E., 1917-2018, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Social sciences--Methodology.
Social sciences.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (334 pages)
Place of Publication:
New Haven, Connecticut ; London : Yale University Press, [1990]
Summary:
How do ordinary citizens, government officials, opinion leaders, or social scientists attempt to solve social problems? How competent are we at defining the problems, seeking information, and finding answers? In this important and controversial book, a distinguished social scientist meticulously analyzes our attempt to understand society so that we can reshape it. In so doing, he largely bypasses both epistemology and contemporary highly abstract theory on knowledge and society in order to achieve a far more concrete analysis of discourse and inquiry in social problem solving. There is a tragic discrepancy, argues Charles E. Lindblom, between our abilities to solve problems and the difficulty of the problems to be solved. We must make do with inadequate information and inconclusive analyses, for the task is less one of learning the truth than of proceeding in inquiry and decisions when the truth cannot be known. Lindblom discusses the many obstacles that prevent us from solving social problems, focusing in particular on learned incompetence. According to Lindblom, parents teach children not to think certain thoughts, and schools often engage more in indoctrination than education. Political rhetoric and commercial sales promotion feed a steady diet of misrepresentation. Social science does help. But because it is dependent on popular thought, it shares the impairments of thought found in both political figures and ordinary citizens. It also develops its own distinctive impairments and is to a degree crippled by its narrow view of scientific method--often more interested in proving than probing. Although social science can be improved in ways that Lindblom outlines in his book, social inquiry calls for such significant contributions from lay thought that it renders many conventional ideals of scientific problem solving inappropriate. Lindblom contends that the route to better social problem solving is not through either scientific or popular consensus or agreement, however much they are valued in the world of science and social science, but through a competition of ideas. The index of a society's competence, he states, is in its discord over ends, values, or purposes. "As usual, Lindblom cuts through to the core of the issue: How is society to understand its central problems and challenges? With originality and courage, he takes on the social scientists and the policy analysts, and presents an inspiring picture of a self-guiding democracy that continuously deliberates over means and ends. A signal contribution."--Robert B. Reich, Harvard University
Contents:
Knowledge and social problems
Volitions
Probing
Inquiry, imposition, and partisanship
Impaired probing
Elite and other advantaged sources of impairing influences
Contemporary elites
Convergences as evidence of impairment
What can social scientists do?
Professional dependence on lay probing
Professional help for lay probing
Professional impairment
Scientific society and self-guiding society
Multiplism, pluralism, and mutual adjustment
Some questions about professional inquiry for a self-guiding society
Reducing impairment.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-300-15952-8

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