The Flight from Reality in the Human Sciences

The Flight from Reality in the Human Sciences by Ian Shapiro, published by Princeton University Press in 2005, is a thought-provoking examination of contemporary practices in the social sciences and humanities. This 223-page book critiques the inward-looking tendencies that Shapiro argues have led scholars to prioritize methodological refinement over the substantive issues they study. Through his analysis, he addresses various disciplines, highlighting how these practices can obscure important realities and facts.
In this edition, Shapiro advocates for a shift toward problem-driven social research grounded in a realist philosophy of science. He critiques several influential movements, including the law and economics movement and reductive theories of human behavior, while emphasizing the need for a more critical approach to problem specification. The book delves into significant topics such as power, democracy, and justice, making a case for a more nuanced understanding of social explanation. Shapiro’s incisive prose invites readers to reconsider the methodologies that dominate academic discourse and their implications for the study of social phenomena.
Official synopsis Publisher
In this captivating yet troubling book, Ian Shapiro offers a searing indictment of many influential practices in the social sciences and humanities today. Perhaps best known for his critique of rational choice theory, Shapiro expands his purview here. In discipline after discipline, he argues, scholars have fallen prey to inward-looking myopia that results from–and perpetuates–a flight from reality.
In the method-driven academic culture we inhabit, argues Shapiro, researchers too often make display and refinement of their techniques the principal scholarly activity. The result is that they lose sight of the objects of their study. Pet theories and methodological blinders lead unwelcome facts to be ignored, sometimes not even perceived. The targets of Shapiro’s critique include the law and economics movement, overzealous formal and statistical modeling, various reductive theories of human behavior, misguided conceptual analysis in political theory, and the Cambridge school of intellectual history.
As an alternative to all of these, Shapiro makes a compelling case for problem-driven social research, rooted in a realist philosophy of science and an antireductionist view of social explanation. In the lucid–if biting–prose for which Shapiro is renowned, he explains why this requires greater critical attention to how problems are specified than is usually undertaken. He illustrates what is at stake for the study of power, democracy, law, and ideology, as well as in normative debates over rights, justice, freedom, virtue, and community. Shapiro answers many critics of his views along the way, securing his position as one of the distinctive social and political theorists of our time.
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