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The Economics of Science: A Critical Realist Overview - Volume 2: Towards a Synthesis of Political Economy and Science and Technology Studies (Paperback)
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The Economics of Science: A Critical Realist Overview - Volume 2: Towards a Synthesis of Political Economy and Science and Technology Studies (Paperback)
Series: Ontological Explorations Routledge Critical Realism
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Dramatic and controversial changes in the funding of science over
the past two decades, towards its increasing commercialization,
have stimulated a huge literature trying to set out an "economics
of science". Whether broadly in favour or against these changes,
the vast majority of these frameworks employ ahistorical analyses
that cannot conceptualise, let alone address, the questions of "why
have these changes occurred?" and "why now?" Nor, therefore, can
they offer much insight into the crucial question of future trends.
Given the growing importance of science and innovation in an age of
both a globalizing knowledge-based economy (itself in crisis) and
enormous challenges that demand scientific and technological
responses, these are significant gaps in our understanding of
important contemporary social processes. This book argues that the
fundamental underlying problem in all cases is the ontological
shallowness of these theories, which can only be remedied by
attention to ontological presuppositions. Conversely, a critical
realist approach affords the integration of a realist political
economy into the analysis of the economics of science that does
afford explicit attention to these crucial questions; a 'cultural
political economy of research and innovation' (CPERI). Accordingly,
the book sets out an introduction to the existing literature on the
economics of science together with novel discussion of the field
from a critical realist perspective. In arguing thus across levels
of abstraction, however, the book also explores how concerted
engagement with substantive social enquiry and theoretical debate
develops and strengthens critical realism as a philosophical
project, rather than simply 'applying' it. While the first of these
two volumes argues how mainstream economics is inadequate to the
task of an explanatory and critical 'economics of science', the
challenge in this second volume is to examine the strengths and
weaknesses of disciplines offering more promising starting points.
Two social scientific disciplines are particularly promising
candidates, starting from 'economy' or 'science', namely heterodox
political economy and science & technology studies
respectively. Synthesising these into an 'economics of science',
however, still encounters considerable hurdles, in that there
remain some fundamental and mutual philosophical incompatibilities.
Formulating an 'economics of science' thus demands that both
'economics' and 'science' be redefined. The book explores how a
critical realist approach affords some common ground upon which
this productive synthesis may be pursued, in the form of a cultural
political economy of research and innovation (CPERI).
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