Adorno
T On the Logic of the Social Sciences
[This is a reply to the Popper article that precedes it. Many of the
specific arguments are found in Adorno's introduction. Briefly,
Popper's approach leads to many social issues unexamined in his focus
on logical refutation and method, including the contradictory nature of
the events being studied, and the implicit notion of totality. Of
course his notion of open society is a liberal one, and his description
of the scientific community is idealist. In what follows, I have
selected some points and quotes which extend and elaborate this
argument].
Sociology tries to clarify and relate events by abstraction from
material contradictions. How this is done in positivism needs
examining [not only are contradictions suppressed, but
abstraction avoids the issue of essences].
'... in industrial market societies by no means everything... can be
simply deduced from its principle [official ideologies like liberal
freedom]. Such societies contain within themselves countless
non-capitalist enclaves... At issue here is whether in order to
perpetuate
itself [capitalist society] needs such enclaves. Their specific
irrationality complements as it were that of the structure as a whole.
Social totality does not lead a life of its own over and above that
which it unites and of which it is in its turn composed' (107) . The
concept of society is needed, but the issue is a relation of parts to
wholes. This is ignored in pleas for middle-range theories [this
is Adorno 's term for the focus on specific issues and disputes
advocated by Popper. It is a deliberate reference to the work of
Merton, maybe as a kind of insult?]
'One would fetishise science if one radically separated the immanent
problems from the real ones which are weakly reflected in its
formalisms' (109). Social reality is contradictory and adequate
'knowledge is guaranteed by the possibility of grasping the
contradiction as necessary and thus extending rationality to it' (109).
Popper does seem to recognise that research is done in institutions for
career purposes [but, presumably, does not follow the implications
through -- that these institutions also take part in capitalist social
relations etc] (110).
'By no means the last of the necessary tasks of epistemology... would
be to reflect on the actual process of cognition instead of [imposing a
model or a methodology]' (111).
Criticism also presupposes a solution or implies it, so sociology can
never just be self-critical but must criticise society in order to be
adequate to its object (114).
Popper's limited ventures into the sociology of knowledge [the bits on
'anthropology', and the bits about the role of illusion] are
uncritical. There is no attempt to see ideology as socially necessary
illusion. This implies a relativism. Popper abandons the attempt to
distinguish between true and false consciousness and therefore abandons
objectivity itself [which should include a discussion of how
truth can become distorted].
'The insight into society as a totality... [means]... that all the
moments active in this totality... [are not]... reducible one to
another, but must be incorporated in knowledge; it cannot permit itself
to be terrorised by the academic division of labour' (120). The role of
the social and experience needs to be prioritised, as Durkheim said
when defining social facts as constant and so on.
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