Bhaskar, Roy, 1944-2014

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Bhaskar, Roy, 1944-2014
Other forms of name
Bhaskar, Ram Roy, 1944-2014
Bhaskar, Roy, 1944-
Date of birth
1944-05-15
Date of death
2014-11-19
Place of birth
Teddington (London, England)
Field of activity
Science--Philosophy Critical realism
Associate group
University of London. Institute of Education
Universitetet i Tromsø
Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences
University of Edinburgh
Linacre College (University of Oxford)
Pembroke College (University of Oxford)
University of Oxford
Occupation
Philosophers College teachers
Associated Language
eng
Gender
male
Fuller form of name
Ram Roy
Language
English
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 109228446
Wikidata: Q523951
Library of congress: n 83800276
Sources of Information
  • His A realist theory of science, 1978:
  • LC data base, 10/6/83
  • 670 Guardian (online), viewed Dec. 4, 2014
  • RA. LCN 2016
Wikipedia description:

Ram Roy Bhaskar (15 May 1944 – 19 November 2014) was an English philosopher of science who is best known as the initiator of the philosophical movement of critical realism (CR). Bhaskar argued that the task of science is "the production of the knowledge of those enduring and continually active mechanisms of nature that produce the phenomena of the world", rather than the discovery of quantitative laws, and that experimental science makes sense only if such mechanisms exist and operate outside the lab as well as inside it. Roy Bhaskar is certainly the most prominent advocate for "critical realism," but he did not initiate either the term or the concept. The term was used earlier by Donald Campbell (1974/1988, p. 432), and the concept of combining ontological realism and epistemological constructivism goes back at least to Herbert Blumer (1969). Bhaskar went on to apply that realism about mechanisms and causal powers to the philosophy of social science, and he also elaborated a series of arguments to support the critical role of philosophy and the human sciences. According to Bhaskar, it is possible and desirable for the study of society to be scientific. Bhaskar was a World Scholar at the Institute of Education, University College London.

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