On the Origins of Interest-Group Theory: A Critique of a Process
- 1 December 1974
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 68 (4), 1505-1519
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1959938
Abstract
Starting with nineteenth-century jurisprudence, this essay traces the changing perceptions of the nature and role of groups in politics as affected in turn by scientific reformism, classic pluralism, and descriptive science orientations to the study of politics. The work of Laski and Bentley is highlighted.The essay contends that political science has not grown by scientific study laid upon scientific study, but rather by a process of gradual encroachment of ideas in which basic premises, questions, and terms shifted without adequate examination. It is argued that this change is not properly portrayed as a trend from abstract legal metaphysics to ever more sophisticated approximations of reality. The forgotten contributions of past orientations are stressed, and the reasons that Bentley was ignored in his day discussed.More specifically, the study concludes that the process of accretion of ideas was of some benefit to political science as a discipline, but the heritage left by this process was negative in two important respects: the neglect of a dynamic in favor of a static perspective, and the divorce of normative theory from empirical research on American politics.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Economic Basis of PoliticsThe Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 1922
- Briefer NoticesAmerican Political Science Review, 1922
- The Institute of PoliticsAmerican Political Science Review, 1922
- Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty. By Harold J. Laski. (New Haven: Yale University Press. 1917. Pp. 297.)American Political Science Review, 1917
- The Scientific Spirit in PoliticsAmerican Political Science Review, 1917
- The Political Theory of the DisruptionAmerican Political Science Review, 1916
- The American Commonwealth. By James Bryce. (New York: The Macmillan Company. 1910. Two vols. Pp. xv, 742; vii, 962.)American Political Science Review, 1911
- The Law and the Facts: Presidential Address, Seventh Annual Meeting of the American Political Science AssociationAmerican Political Science Review, 1911
- The Struggle for Self-Government. By Lincoln Steffens. (New York: McClure, Phillips and Company. 1906. Pp. 294.)American Political Science Review, 1908
- Growth of American Theories of Popular GovernmentAmerican Political Science Review, 1907