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Philosophy of the Social Sciences
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Truth, Rationality, and the Situation

Mark A. Notturno

CEU Foundation, New York

The Rationality Principle says that people act adequately to their situation, but does not specify how they must act in order to do so. Situational Analysis uses the Rationality Principle, together with a model of the social situation, to explain actions in the past. Unlike Rational Choice Theory, Situational Analysis does not try to predict or influence actions in the future. Popper regarded the Rationality Principle as false, but thought that we should use it nonetheless. This poses a problem for understanding his views about conjecture and refutation. Popper, however, thought that all scientific models are false, and that whether or not we should reject a model depends on the problem that we are trying to solve.

Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Vol. 28, No. 3, 400-421 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/004839319802800305


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A. Oakley
Popper's Ontology of Situated Human Action
Philosophy of the Social Sciences, December 1, 2002; 32(4): 455 - 486.
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