Social science and social purpose

1 hr read
Rate this book:
241 pages 1969

About This Book

Simey wanted science to serve humanity in practical ways, instead of being only an academic pursuit. In that context, this book is mainly about the unity of facts and values. Facts and values are inseparable. Facts are meaningless without values - and values are mere abstractions without facts. Values pre-determine perception. The pursuit of truth requires open honesty about both values and facts - including numbers, laws, rules, notions about time, space,causality. Certainty may be impossible but honesty about values can be possible. Humans can strive to know why and how they arrive at facts, opinions, actions. With such insights, people can clarify and reconcile conflicts of values. They can talk to agree about values.
In such ways, social science can assist people to create (temporary) agreements about the purpose of society - plus how this purpose might best be pursued. They can clarify the Universal Common Good.

Buy This Book

As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.

Write a Review

Sign in to write a review.