Morcol argues that the objectivist and deterministic assumptions
of mainstream policy analysis, which are based on the
Newtonian/positivist worldview or mind-set, should be transcended.
After demonstrating that the favored methods of mainstream policy
analysis are based on Newtonian ontological and positivist
epistemological assumptions and that the connections between these
two are intimately and historically related, he critically assesses
and highlights the contributions of quantum mechanics, complexity
theory, and cognitive science to a new mind-set in scientific
knowledge, a post-Newtonian and postpositivist mind-set.
Newtonian/positivist and post-Newtonian/postpositivist
worldviews are conceptualized as fuzzy mind-sets, that is they are
not mutually exclusive and that they share assumptions at varying
degrees. Cognitive science shows that some of the fundamental
concepts and assumptions of the Newtonain/positivist
philosopy--such as the concept of causality and the tendency to
categorize reality (reductionist thinking)--are the products of the
evolutionary adaptation of the human mind and they have become its
built-in defaults. As Morcol suggests, we cannot change the
biological defaults of our minds, but we can change our way of
thinking, to an extent, through a cultural evolution. He argues
that conscious efforts can be made in policy analysis education to
help move our thinking toward a post-Newtonian and postpositivist
policy analysis. Of particular interest to scholars and advanced
students dealing with policy analysis, public administration, and
political science, especially those concerned with epistemology and
methodology.
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