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Relativism and the Social Sciences

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This volume of essays deals with the problem of relativism, in particular cultural relativism. If our society knows better than other societies, how do we know that it knows better? There is a profound irony in the fact that this self-doubt has become most acute in the one civilisation that has persuaded the rest of the world to emulate it. The claim to cognitive superiority is often restricted, of course, to the limited sphere of natural science and technology; and that immediately raises the second main theme of this volume - the differences between the human and natural sciences. These essays reach towards a new style and mode of enquiry - a mixture of philosophy, history and anthropology - that promises to prove more revealing and fruitful.

216 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1985

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About the author

Ernest Gellner

55 books105 followers
Ernest Gellner was a prominent British-Czech philosopher, social anthropologist, and writer on nationalism.

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