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Rediscoveries and Reformulations : Humanistic Methodologies for International Studies (Cambridge Studies in International Relations)

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Title: Rediscoveries and Reformulations : Humanistic Methodologies for International Studies (Cambridge Studies in International Relations)
by Hayward R. Alker, Steve Smith, Thomas Biersteker, Chris Brown, Phil Cerny, Joseph Grieco, A. J. R. Groom
ISBN: 0-521-46695-4
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Pub. Date: 30 May, 1996
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $34.00
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Average Customer Rating: 1 (1 review)

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Rating: 1
Summary: Voyaging Between Abstractions Ain't that Informative
Comment: The author is concerned with somehow creating connections to the world of humanistic interpretations of international relations and voyaging between these various interpretations and the more formal interpretations of logical and economic analysis. The collection of essays in this book is a republication of Alker's previously published articles.

The book makes plain things confusing, which is, I guess, how you become an illustrious academic in the dark forest of irrelevance and obfuscation that some social sciences have become. For example, the Milean dialogue from a well-known book by Thucydides is converted from its plain meaning that "might makes right" into a pretentious quasi-logical puzzle full of some portentous "humanistic" meaning.

Much of the book is unreadable. And all of it is irrelevant for understanding what is going on in world politics. In reality, the author moved from MIT to Santa Monica; and intellectually he moved from abstract econometrics (which has little to do with the way the real economy works) to abstract analysis of "humanistic" doctrines (which are completely irrelevant in the real world of politics). This book gives you a sanitized world of concepts that cannot be applied to reality. In fact, there is no reality here. The author worries about things that do not exist in the real world.

He is (pathetically) trying to get some mileage out of attacking Ronald Reagan for calling nuclear-tipped missiles "peace keepers." Am I the only Danish storyteller who sees that the emperor's new clothes still leave him naked? How can one fail to recognize a typical, stereotypical, hackneyed liberal attack under a highfalutin veil of "narrative" analysis, or some other such ruse?

This book shows just how much out of touch the upper echelon of power within the profession has become.

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