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Of Politics and Social Science

Authors :
William Peter Baehr
Source :
European Journal of Political Theory. 3:191-217
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2004.

Abstract

During the late 1940s and early 1950s, David Riesman and Hannah Arendt were engaged in an animated discussion about the meaning and character of totalitarianism. Their disagreement reflected, in part, different experiences and dissonant intellectual backgrounds. Arendt abhorred the social sciences, finding them pretentious and obfuscating. Riesman, in contrast, abandoned a career in law to take up the sociological vocation, which he combined with his own heterodox brand of humanistic psychology. This article delineates the stakes of the Arendt Riesman debate by examining Arendt’s critique of social science and Riesman’s defence of a sociological interpretation of totalitarianism. In addition, the article argues that Arendt’s theory of totalitarianism misdescribed the nature of Nazi and Bolshevik societies in ways that damaged her political account more generally. Riesman intuited that weakness and, as the following article shows, modern historical research has confirmed it.

Details

ISSN :
17412730 and 14748851
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Political Theory
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........515aa9391b90ce846b0470fcf520bbd5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1474885104041047