A SOCIOLOGIST IS MORE LOGICAL
A SOCIOLOGIST IS MORE LOGICAL THAN A POLITICAL SCIENTIST? INCONCEIVABLE!!: Via Kieran Healy, I found and took the Battleground God test. I did this with some hesitation, since it’s been some time since I’ve pondered my ontological givens where religion is concerned. The good news: this was my result: “Congratulations! You have been awarded the ...
A SOCIOLOGIST IS MORE LOGICAL THAN A POLITICAL SCIENTIST? INCONCEIVABLE!!: Via Kieran Healy, I found and took the Battleground God test. I did this with some hesitation, since it's been some time since I've pondered my ontological givens where religion is concerned. The good news: this was my result: "Congratulations! You have been awarded the TPM medal of distinction! This is our second highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground. The fact that you progressed through this activity being hit only once and biting no bullets suggests that your beliefs about God are well thought out and almost entirely internally consistent." The bad news: The medal of distinction is not as grand as it sounds -- "46.88% of the people who have completed this activity, like you, took very little damage and were awarded the TPM Medal of Distinction." More importantly, Kieran beat me on the logic score (I flamed out on the last question). Beaten by a sociologist!! I'm going to need some time to adjust. [Er, what's the big deal?--ed. Among the social sciences, there is a little-discussed but ever-present prestige hierarchy that gives disciplines resembling the natural or physical sciences greater status than those disciplines that more resemble the humanities. Political science usually does better than sociology on that scale. I'm not saying it's logical; it's just the way things are. So sociology is at the bottom of the barrel?--ed. Heavens, no -- that would be anthropology.] Oh, well -- maybe an economist like Brad DeLong will do even worse. Kieran responds on the question of the social sciences.
A SOCIOLOGIST IS MORE LOGICAL THAN A POLITICAL SCIENTIST? INCONCEIVABLE!!: Via Kieran Healy, I found and took the Battleground God test. I did this with some hesitation, since it’s been some time since I’ve pondered my ontological givens where religion is concerned. The good news: this was my result: “Congratulations! You have been awarded the TPM medal of distinction! This is our second highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground. The fact that you progressed through this activity being hit only once and biting no bullets suggests that your beliefs about God are well thought out and almost entirely internally consistent.” The bad news: The medal of distinction is not as grand as it sounds — “46.88% of the people who have completed this activity, like you, took very little damage and were awarded the TPM Medal of Distinction.” More importantly, Kieran beat me on the logic score (I flamed out on the last question). Beaten by a sociologist!! I’m going to need some time to adjust. [Er, what’s the big deal?–ed. Among the social sciences, there is a little-discussed but ever-present prestige hierarchy that gives disciplines resembling the natural or physical sciences greater status than those disciplines that more resemble the humanities. Political science usually does better than sociology on that scale. I’m not saying it’s logical; it’s just the way things are. So sociology is at the bottom of the barrel?–ed. Heavens, no — that would be anthropology.] Oh, well — maybe an economist like Brad DeLong will do even worse. Kieran responds on the question of the social sciences.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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