About the Book
What makes something social? Is human social reality, the object-domain of the human sciences, essentially opaque to the explanatory method of nomological objectivity that characterizes the physical sciences? Do historical and cultural underpinnings of human existence severely restrain the ambition of objectivity in the human sciences? Or, is there a “sui generis” paradigm of social objectivity in social enquiry, such as illustrated by Marxism and Ethnomethodology? Besides, do diversity of traditions constrain social understanding in a way that inevitably results in cultural relativism? What does understanding tradition consist in, including whatever we might mean by “the Indian tradition”? These questions about humanity and tradition are dealt with in this book from a variety of interesting perspectives. Together these various modes of understanding provide an illuminating account of human self-understanding in social enquiry.
Contents
About the Author / Editor
Bijoy Boruah teaches Philosophy at Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. He has authored “Fiction and Emotion: A Study in Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Mind, and has published many papers in philosophical aesthetics, philosophy of mind, and value theory. He is currently engaged in writing a book on Virtue Metaphysics and the Self.
Ramashankar Misra had taught Philosophy at Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur until his retirement in 2003. He has co-edited “Man, Meaning and Morality”, and has published many papers in social, political and moral philosophy.