Table of Contents Notes on Contributors Ordering information
It is a special pleasure to be publishing this issue, which is entirely devoted to papers of my colleagues at the Graduate Faculty. In assembling the papers I invited colleagues to reflect on developments and consider prospects in their own disciplines which they find promising or otherwise significant. So what these papers represent are the personal views and tastes of colleagues. However, the issue is not meant as a profile of the Graduate Faculty and it is not. Rather it is a group of papers focusing on problems with which respected and active scholars in the social sciences are now engaged. There is no common theme, only a shared concern for the future of social inquiry.
Table of Contents
Frontiers in Social Inquiry
Editor's Introduction 687
History's Lessons Robert Heilbroner 689
Futures of European States Charles Tilly 705
The State to the Rescue? Political
Science and History Reconnect
Ira Katznelson
719
The Politics of the Impossible:
Or, Whatever Happened to
Evolutionary Theory?
Eli Sagan
739
Weak Sociology/Strong
Sociologists: Consequences and
Contradictions of a Field in
Turmoil
Alan Wolfe
759
Otiose Economics Alice H. Amsden 781
Toward a Structural Theory of
Psychopathology
David Shapiro
799
The Resurgence of Pragmatism Richard J. Bernstein 813
Multiculturalism and the
Challenge of Anthropology
William Roseberry
841
Table of Contents and Index of
Contributors to Volume 59
859
Notes on Contributors
(at time of publication)
Alice H. Amsden is Leo Model Professor of Economics in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. She is the author of Asia's Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industrialization (1989).
Richard J. Bernstein is Vera List Professor of Philosophy in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His most recent book is The New Constellation: The Ethical-Political Horizons of Modernity/Postmodernity (1992).
Robert Heilbroner is Norman Thomas Professor of Economics Emeritus in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His Twenty-First-Century Capitalism will be published next year.
Ira Katznelson is Loeb Professor of Political and Social Science in the Graduate Faculty of the New School of Social Research. His most recent book is Marxism and the City (1992).
William Roseberry is professor and chair of the Department of Anthropology in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His books include Anthropologies and Histories (1989).
Eli Sagan is guest lecturer in the Department of Sociology in the New School Graduate Faculty. He is the author of The Honey and the Hemlock: Democracy and Paranoia in Ancient Athens and Modern America (1991).
David Shapiro is professor of psychology in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His most recent book is Psychotherapy of Neurotic Character (1989).
Charles Tilly is University Distinguished Professor at the New School for Social Research. His European Revolutions will be published next year.
Alan Wolfe is Dean and Michael E. Gellert Professor of Social
and Political Science in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social
Research. His books include Whose Keeper? Social Science and Moral
Obligation (1989).