Infanteer said:
As I've maintained all along, human behaviour is (as of now) such a "Chaotic System" that it can only be reduced to trends - there are always significant exceptions and predictions almost always fail.
Really... perhaps you'd like to demonstrate where a majority of presidential plurality electoral systems have failed to produce a 2-party system a la Ryker's reformation of Duverger's Law? Seems that prediction almost never fails.
Scientific Law successfully predicts phenomena (drop a ball and watch what happens). Scientific Theory does a good job of doing so, but there are usually spaces and gaps that need to be addressed through more research and development (The speed of light is a tricky thing to observe).
I suppose Rational Choice Theory and Realism, or even Liberal Institutionalism don't do a good job of predicting and describing things? All use the scientific method. No, they're not perfect but neither are theories in physics, biology, or any other "hard" science.
The art of politics, economics, history can do neither of these. Perhaps CivU and Glorified Ape haven't got to that part of their university studies yet? ???
One of the first things you learn in poli sci is that there are no laws (as of yet) with one possible exception (see Duverger). Scientific methodology and principle are some of the first things you learn. Perhaps your poli sci training was such that you never learned them and how they're applied in poli sci through the department but that's a shortcoming of your department, not of the field.
Infanteer said:
You seem to be pointing out that in order to be considered "experienced" in political science one has to go to university. I think Brad Sallows is just as capable with 20-years of experience as an Officer and as someone who maintains an interest in the field through reading and critical thought as you are of making assumptions with 1 or 2 years off your parents leash.
1 or 2 years? I'm 24 in March and have been "off the leash" (whatever that means) since about 16. Experience as an officer is irrelevant to an understanding of the field. One can "understand" politics without taking poli sci, of course. But how one can make assertions as to its validity, scientific value, etc. without having ANY experience with the field itself, nor any figures to back up their argument, is beyond me.
Again, I don't remember any "tricks" that one picks up at university with regards to politics - there is nothing there that can't be found at Chapters.
Tricks? Where did I say one learns "tricks" unless by that you mean how to employ scientific methodology to examine something.
The only parts of psychology that are scientific are the parts that deal with biology (which is a hard science). Other then that, theories of cognition, behaviour patterns, etc are just like political theory of governance and human affairs - it is based off of "trends" in human behaviour (I wouldn't even equate them to a true Scientific theory like Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, which attempts to deal with universal constants - there are no universal constants with human behaviour)
Only the biological parts are scientific, eh? So psychologists don't employ scientific methodology to glean understanding in any other area? Science isn't about the result, it's about the approach. To say a physicist isn't a scientist because he hasn't discovered any laws is ridiculous. You seem to have this strange understanding of science as something that deals solely with physical phenomena, which is ridiculous.
sci ·ence
Pronunciation: 'sI-&n(t)s
Function: noun
: knowledge or a system of knowledge covering general truths or the operation of general laws especially as obtained and tested through the scientific method and concerned with the physical world and its phenomena
sci'ence
1 : the state of knowing : knowledge as distinguished from ignorance or misunderstanding
2 a
: a department of systematized knowledge as an object of study <the science of theology> b : something (as a sport or technique) that may be studied or learned like systematized knowledge <have it down to a science>
3 a : knowledge or a system of knowledge covering general truths or the operation of general laws especially as obtained and tested through
scientific method b : such knowledge or such a system of knowledge concerned with the physical world and its phenomena : NATURAL SCIENCE
4 : a system or method reconciling practical ends with scientific laws <culinary science>
Pretty selective and myopic definition of science you have there. Funny how you chose the specific definition you deemed appropriate and ignored all the others. Very scientific of you.
As it is, your own selection applies as well. Political science employs the scientific method to attempt to extract general laws or truths. Whether it succeeds or not is irrelevant, as long as it stays true to objectivity and methodology.
Since one cannot discern any laws from a liberal art, one cannot really test theories in a closed system, and one cannot discern general truths (only trends), then I can't for the life of me see how you are claiming that Political Science is a "science" considering it doesn't in any form meet up with the definition of the word.
Who said one can't discern general truths in political science? Immutable laws, not likely, but it's possible. The fact that "general" is specified means that exceptions are assumed.
How many "Labs" have you had in your politics class? There is a reason why Political Science is, along with History, English Literature, Economics, and Sociology, put into the Liberal Arts department of a University.
And psychology is contained in the sciences but according to you, that's inaccurate where anything but biological psychology is concerned. As for "labs", we did exactly that in Empirical Research Methods (a poli sci course) by running relationships in SPSS. I don't know what your political science program was like, maybe you focused on political philosophy and missed the scientific method courses and classes where it's employed.
Sorry to burst your bubble, but of the many skills you should be able to take from university (while studying for a BA), a grounding in scientific method and understanding of a hard science is not one of them.
Wow, how utterly inaccurate. It would seem UBC's poli sci department is severely lacking if that's the impression you gleaned from studying under them.