A Rose By Any Other Name
When it comes to the
debate of ideas versus interest, personal definitions become very important for
understanding someone’s rationalizations. Several alternate, yet similar options
have been suggested to simplify, or clarify the general definitions of ideas
and interests. They include homo economicus (HE) versus homo sociologicus (HS),
value-driven versus rational calculation, and motives versus intentions.
As was discussed
in class, none of these are particularly accurate reflections of ideas versus
interests. However, they do provide additional context when you are struggling
to wrap your head around the concept of ideas versus interests as applied to
international relations.
HE and HS provide
larger models that are quite helpful when considering the wellsprings, or
motivations if you will, for ideas and interests. Regardless of whether or not
you subscribe to the theory that ideas and interests are part of one greater
process or mostly separate entities, HE and HS are contextual verbiage for discerning
ultimate causation.
This ties to
motives and intentions, which again cannot used as direct synonyms for ideas
and interests but allow the puzzled student of international relations to frame
the reasons why international powers take certain actions, rather than others. Those
cues in turn can be used to prove or disprove a particular argument for ideas versus
interests.
Pulled together,
these parallels help to color in some of the ambiguity that surrounds ideas
versus interests. Additionally, by examining the motives and intentions of
ideas and interests, the theory of ideas versus interests gains a greater practical
applicability for use on the world stage as it is today. It is a point I’ve
made repeatedly before, but history is one of our greatest teachers. Studying
historical ideas and interests can help when similar situations arise in the
present. This is particularly relevant if you subscribe to Goldstein and
Keohane’s theory of interconnected ideas and interests.
Sources
Goldstein,
Judith; Keohane, Robert O. Ideas and Foreign Policy. Cornell University
Press. 1993.
I liked how these titles tried to encapsulate the argument, but I really enjoyed professor Jackson's suggestion of homo-internationalrelationist (HIR) in this context. By way of creating titles, it seems to cut the argument into distinct fields of thought that seek to explain theory without, perhaps, taking the bigger picture into account. HIR, in contrast, really seemed to be a legitimate way to open the conversation to allow both schools of thought to come together. We can address ideational, intangible concepts and their role within the more realist, concrete environment. Maybe we need to look at homo-globalizationist as an operational definition to bridge the theories laid out by HE and HS.
ReplyDeleteYour point that they don't really take into account the bigger picture is very valid. I like to think of them like training wheels. They help you catch your balance and kind of figure out what you're looking at before you have to confront the whole caboodle at once.
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