How Reason Almost Lost Its Mind: The Strange Career of Cold War Rationality Buy on Amazon

https://www.ebooknetworking.net/books_detail-022632415X.html

How Reason Almost Lost Its Mind: The Strange Career of Cold War Rationality

20.98 21.00 USD
Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 Buy Used — $16.88

Usually ships in 24 hours

Book Details

ISBN / ASIN022632415X
ISBN-139780226324159
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,118,162
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

In the United States at the height of the Cold War, roughly between the end of World War II and the early 1980s, a new project of redefining rationality commanded the attention of sharp minds, powerful politicians, wealthy foundations, and top military brass. Its home was the human sciences psychology, sociology, political science, and economics, among others and its participants enlisted in an intellectual campaign to figure out what rationality should mean and how it could be deployed.
How Reason Almost Lost Its Mind brings to life the people Herbert Simon, Oskar Morgenstern, Herman Kahn, Anatol Rapoport, Thomas Schelling, and many others and places, including the RAND Corporation, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, the Cowles Commission for Research and Economics, and the Council on Foreign Relations, that played a key role in putting forth a Cold War rationality. Decision makers harnessed this picture of rationality optimizing, formal, algorithmic, and mechanical in their quest to understand phenomena as diverse as economic transactions, biological evolution, political elections, international relations, and military strategy. The authors chronicle and illuminate what it meant to be rational in the age of nuclear brinkmanship.

More Books by Paul Erickson, Judy L. Klein, Lorraine Daston, Rebecca Lemov, Thomas Sturm, Michael D. Gordin

Donate to EbookNetworking
Prev
Next