General Science
In: Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, Band 27, Heft 3b, S. 59-60
ISSN: 1559-1476
2475461 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, Band 27, Heft 3b, S. 59-60
ISSN: 1559-1476
This text demonstrates that there is a politics model that unifies the discipline and structures its relationship to the other social sciences. It shows how this model underlies important works of applied research in all the main political science subfields.
In this concise but wide-ranging text, Alan Zuckerman introduces the reader to the various approaches to political explanation. He shows how researchers espousing different theoretical assumptions, levels of explanation, variables, and data come to offer conflicting accounts of the phenomena to be studied. He then introduces five paradigms of polit
In: British journal of political science, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 155-172
ISSN: 1469-2112
There have been a number of attempts in recent years to define the subject-matter of political science and to provide a theoretical framework within which the discipline may be expected to develop. Among these, the work of David Easton occupies a leading place.1 This article discusses how successful Easton has been in adumbrating a general theory embracing the discipline. It then offers a rather looser and less ambitious framework within which the theories collectively called 'political science' may be placed and their interrelationships perceived.
In: Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, Band 24, Heft 5b, S. 18-18
ISSN: 1559-1476
In: Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, Band 26, Heft 1b, S. 15-15
ISSN: 1559-1476
In: Political studies review, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 439-439
ISSN: 1478-9302
In: Peace research abstracts journal, Band 40, Heft 4, S. 427
ISSN: 0031-3599
In: Political studies review, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 277-278
ISSN: 1478-9302
This book deals with the role and place of the general will in modern and contemporary political thought. This project is carried out at the crossroads of the history of ideas and political philosophy. It extensively develops historical and philosophical themes, showing modifications to the idea of the general will in the writings of thinkers who sometimes represent very distant epochs. The author tracks down the birth and the development of the idea of the general will in ancient, medieval
In: Government & opposition: an international journal of comparative politics, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 277-302
ISSN: 1477-7053
PROFESSOR LAZARSFELD ONCE REFERRED TO SOCIOLOGY AS BEING IN A sense a residuary legatee, the surviving part of a very general study, out of which specializations have successively been shaped.The same might be said of political science. In the West the first deliberate and reflective studies of political life were made in Greece at the end of the th century BC, and in the succeeding century. The histories of Herodotus and Thucydides, some of the pamphlets attributed to Xenophon, above all the normative and empirical studies of Plato and Aristotle were among the direct ancestors of contemporary political science. Parallel examples are to be found in the intellectual history of China, India and Islam. It seems that at certain stages in the development of great societies questions of legitimacy, power and leadership assume supreme importance; and intense intellectual effort, using the best analytical tools available, is devoted to the study of man as brought to a focus in the study of politics.