Beschreibung
"Does knowledge matter to politics?" is the main question the book tries to answer. The analysis is interdisciplinary and covers a wide range of topics: a social epistemology assessment of the efficacy of political institutions in promoting the generation and the diffusion of science and technology; the proposal of the alternative concept of satisfying rationality to found the theory of social knowledge; the roles of social knowledge in the constitution making and the transitional justice; the arguments in favor of decentralized knowledge in social problem solving and its empowerment through devolution, de-bureaucratization and deregulation; the means to ensure the independency of knowledge from power and at the same time its social utility; the knowledge justified to inform the voters in political campaigns; the critique to technocracy as the wrong solution to deal with the crisis of complexity in contemporary society.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Truth, Science, and Politics: An Analysis of Social Epistemology.- A "Satisfying" Theory of Social Knowledge.- Knowledge and the Politics of Transition.- Bringing Power to Knowledge. Choosing Policies to Use Decentralized Knowledge.- Knowledge, Power and Self as Distinct Spheres.- Two Conceptions of Democracy.- The Crisis of Complexity.
Autorenporträt
InhaltsangabeTruth, Science, and Politics: An Analysis of Social Epistemology.- A "Satisfying" Theory of Social Knowledge.- Knowledge and the Politics of Transition.- Bringing Power to Knowledge. Choosing Policies to Use Decentralized Knowledge.- Knowledge, Power and Self as Distinct Spheres.- Two Conceptions of Democracy.- The Crisis of Complexity.- Contributors.