Rationalism, Government Ethics and Differential Information
Rationalism in Politics and how it Impacts the Public's View of Government Services.
Rationalism is the belief that reason as the only legitimate basis for knowledge and that reason is perfect and absolute (Greanleaf, 1968, p. 99). Since reason is absolute and perfect, historical and social experience has little or no meaning for a rationalist. Consequently, rationalism in politics is always "charged with the feeling of the moment" (Oakeshott, Rationalism in politics, 1994, p. 6), a series of crises that can be solved by perfect reason and each administration supposedly has infinite possibility in front of it (Oakeshott, 1994, p. 6). Since there is a perfect answer, there is only one answer and there is no place for a variety of answers that could be good or better; only best (Oakeshott, 1994, p. 6). Therefore, a rationalist cannot accept individualism. For a rationalist, the only knowledge is technical knowledge and that can be learned from a book or from a correspondence course (Oakeshott, 1994, p. 9). The rationalist considers himself/herself to be "self-made," with little or no regard for experience outside of his/her own. This is illusory, as each of us is a product...
Rationalism Politics Impacts Public's View The six deadly sins in public administration are mandated in Drucker's "The deadly sins in public administration." The first one is to have too great of a "lofty objective" (Drucker, 1980, p. 103) in the aim that a program is trying to achieve. Programs need to have objectives that are specific and not targeted towards some general good. The next one is to incorporate too
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