Word: gov
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Fourth, political philosophy, historical studies, and "empirical theory" are all, of course, indispensible parts of the study of government. The important point is that, indeed, "the Gov department may not give enough importance to the behavioral approach." This is the "sin" of which I accused the Gov department; Mr. Hoffmann's conclusion contradicts his own fourth point. Thomas C. Horne
...Horne's article about the Gov. Department raies different issues that he has falled to distinguish. One, what I mentioned as a reason for the social studies program (the study of Freud or Weber) is not necessarily a criticism of the Gov. Dept--merely a suggestion that there are various ways of studying society and polity...
Rusher defies the Gov 1 textbooks that describe the members of the two great parties as men who will compromise, sacrifice a few of their principles in order to elect a presidential candidate. Rusher is not a compromiser. "Ideally, the best thing would be not to allow a liberal of any description to become president," he said. "If there had to be a liberal, let him be a Democrat...
...towards empirical social science is also important. In this, the Social Relations Department is as guilty as Government. Elsewhere, sociology departments have drawn political science into empirical work by their own political sociology. But Harvard's Soc Rel Department is so purely conceptual, and even more unbalanced than the Gov Department, that any such influence is out of the question. (Government students who seek the hard facts of American political life in political or urban sociology courses are greeted instead with grand theories, conceptual schemes, and Balinese villages...
...Gov 180 lectures, May 2nd rallies flashed in my mind. So what if Great Britain is a minor power now? "Yes," I said. "I'd want Britain fighting with...