The subjective side of politics
41
the voting behaviour of a small community, a beloved object of empirical research.
A further difficulty lies also with the extreme fragmentation of the research objects
in political science; their relevance for the (empirically anchored) conceptualiza-
tion of politics is not always easy to grasp. A case in point is policy analysis, which
is hardly the royal road to the understanding of politics as sphere of complex and
intertwined processes. This posture sounds like an extreme reaction to the holism
of political philosophy – a holism that is on the one hand a necessary piece of its
epistemic status, on the other hand something often at risk of sliding into theories
of everything.
All these drawbacks are not listed here to doubt the scientific validity of empiri-
cal political science, of which several types exist, by far not entirely prejudiced by
those perplexing aspects. Especially in International Relations
10
and International
Political Economy, sound empirical research is being accompanied by a permanent
interest in the understanding of processes and trends.
What is more generally the actual relationship between political philosophy, in
the broad version illustrated in this Excursus, and political science? Political phi-
losophy is bound by its statute neither to refer to methodically analysed facts, used
as empirical evidence for its statements, not to abstain from discussing and choos-
ing values. Besides, diverging developments as those sketched above have made its
dialogue with political science uneasy. Nonetheless philosophers, since they also
refer to alleged factual truths, do good whenever they check their assertions about
a certain subject against those analytically researched by their empirical cousins.
‘Facts’ are differently constructed according to the epistemology of the two disci-
plines, and a direct comparison is often naive. Yet contacts and exchanges are – most
of the time and indirectly – stimulating and can prevent both partners from falling
all too easily and as naive victims to empirical-analytical or philosophical blunders.
It must, however, be said that in recent years the attention of the two disciplines for
one another has not been significant; on both sides, the tendency to closure and
self-sufficiency prevails.
Beyond political philosophy and political science, a third party or gender
(tertium
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