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  Accounting for political preferences: Cultural theory vs. cultural history
 
 
Title: Accounting for political preferences: Cultural theory vs. cultural history
Author: Friedman, Jeffrey
Appeared in: Critical review
Paging: Volume 5 (1991) nr. 3 pages 325-351
Year: 1991
Contents: Liberalism sanctifies the values chosen by the sovereign individual. This tends to rule out criticisms of an individual's “preference” for one value over another by, ironically, establishing a deterministic view of the self that protects the self's desires from scrutiny. Similarly, rational choice approaches to social theory begin with previously determined individual preferences and focus on the means by which they are pursued, concentrating on the results rather than the sources of people's values. A striking new attempt to go behind the liberal and rational-choice starting point in order to understand political preferences is found in Aaron Wildavsky's Cultural Theory. Yet Cultural Theory does not facilitate the criticism of preferences, because its understanding of them is fundamentally liberal. Even while rejecting methodological individualism, Cultural Theory's monocausally social theory of preference formation retains in a new guise the liberal preservation of preferences from criticism by reestablishing a deterministic view of the formation of values, leading it to share with liberalism an a historical view of their origins.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

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