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    Situated Animals: A Critique of Social Constructivist Excesses in Political Theory

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2015
    Author
    Melonas, Alexander Paul
    Advisor
    Davis, Heath Fogg
    Committee member
    Gordon, Jane Anna, 1976-
    Schwartz, Joseph M., 1954-
    Arceneaux, Kevin
    Gordon, Lewis R. (Lewis Ricardo), 1962-
    Department
    Political Science
    Subject
    Political Science
    Social Research
    Philosophy
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/3272
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/3254
    Abstract
    In this dissertation I explore the ramifications of political theory being freed from two opposed extremes of biologism and social constructivism because, ultimately, the human animal is both a biological creature and capable of becoming. While it has been highly significant for humanistic scholars to challenge the governing authority of the "hard sciences" as the prime site of legitimacy in modern scholarship, the position of critique has transformed into one of outright and unqualified hostility. I resist this commitment to show that work at the intersection of the human biological sciences and political theory need not amount to political conservatism or pessimism. To this end, I address two questions with the aim of (re-)situating the human animal as a common property in political theory. First, I explore and challenge the commitments that inform the strict social constructionist thesis. This move leads to a second consideration: what questions are open if we see the problem not as biology, but as biological determinism? I make four arguments in this dissertation. First, I use Ernst Cassirer to show that "human" and "animal" can be integrated in a philosophical anthropology in a constructive way, one that avoids the reductionism implied in the term "animal" (or biological creature) and the naiveté of conceiving of human beings as though they are distinct from or wholly independent of nature. Second, I use Marxist materialism to integrate the human biological sciences with a meaningful theory of human freedom. Third, I work at the intersection of contemporary political theories of identity and the human biological sciences to reconcile the effects of "predispositions" with the effects of our social identities. I do so in a way that resists essentialism. Finally, I use feminist scholarship to argue that the human biological sciences cannot be used to justify hierarchy, or rather, that "hard science" doesn't in any meaningful sense say anything at all about equality.
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