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Tradition in a free society : the fideism of Michael Polanyi and the rationalism of Karl Popper

journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by Struan Jacobs
Michael Polanyi and Karl Popper offer contrasting accounts of social tradition. Popper is steeped in the heritage of the Enlightenment, while Polanyi interweaves religious and diverse secular strands of thought. Explaining the liberal tradition, Polanyi features tacit knowledge of rules, standards, applications and interpretations being transmitted by “craftsmen” to “apprentices.” Each generation adopts the liberal tradition on “faith,” commits to creatively developing its art of knowledge-in-practice, and is drawn to the spiritual reality of ideal ends. Of particular interest to Popper is the rationality of social traditions. Likened by him to scientific theories, Popper’s traditions are criticizable and improvable, assisting agents to understand, and act in, the world as stable and predictable. Polanyi’s is the more informative rendering of tradition. Polanyi delves deeply into important areas where Popper only scratches their surface: the tacit dimension, transmission by way of apprenticeship, the meaning of tradition for those who participate in it, and the extent of its authority over them.

History

Journal

Tradition and discovery

Volume

36

Issue

2

Pagination

8 - 25

Publisher

Polanyi Society

Location

Columbia, Mo.

ISSN

1057-1027

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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