<p><em>Magic Science and Society </em>investigates the way the ‘rationality debate’ has developed over the last century from E.E. Evans-Pritchard’s study of Azande magic through Peter Winch’s argument that there can be no such thing as a social science across the arguments about the proper status of science in the 1970s and 1980s to the ‘epistemological’ and ‘ontological’ turns of the early twenty-first century.</p><p>Different people have different understandings of what is rational: some practise magic some orientate to legal convention and tradition and others defer to science and logic. Starting with anthropological studies of witchcraft and working through to contemporary debates about epistemology and ontology in social science this book systematically examines the ways key questions about these issues have been framed and answered. These include:</p><ul> <li>Can ‘magic’ be real either for members of the cultures that practise it or more generally?</li> <li>How can we arbitrate between different types of rationality?</li> <li>Is science a benchmark for studying other forms of rationality or just a cultural practice like any other?</li> <li>What are the implications of these issues for the social sciences themselves?</li> </ul><p>This book will be of interest to anthropologists sociologists philosophers of the social sciences and science studies practitioners.</p>
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