{"id":361,"date":"2022-03-14T11:03:31","date_gmt":"2022-03-14T15:03:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/?page_id=361"},"modified":"2022-03-14T11:06:49","modified_gmt":"2022-03-14T15:06:49","slug":"fact-value-book-summary","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/fact-value-book-summary\/","title":{"rendered":"Fact-value book summary"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2 style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>Facts, values, and the policy world<\/em><\/h2>\n<h3 style=\"text-align: center;\">Annotated contents<\/h3>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignleft size-medium wp-image-358\" src=\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-240x360.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"240\" height=\"360\" srcset=\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-240x360.jpg 240w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-400x600.jpg 400w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-160x240.jpg 160w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-768x1152.jpg 768w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-1024x1536.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-1366x2048.jpg 1366w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-360x540.jpg 360w, https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ryan-Facts-Values-and-the-Policy-World-FC-scaled.jpg 1707w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 240px) 100vw, 240px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Policy analysts trained in various social sciences face a generally unacknowledged contradiction. Traditionally, mainstream social science has assumed that there is a gulf \u2013a \u201cdichotomy\u201d\u2013 between facts and values, and that rigorous social science must be as uncontaminated by values as possible. But policy analysis, as reflection on the question \u201cwhat is to be done?,\u201d is intrinsically concerned with matters of value. Evasions of this contradiction have relied on various stratagems that have the effect of smuggling unexamined values into analysis.<br \/>\nThis book demonstrates the damage that this contradiction inflicts upon policy analysis, and upon society as a whole. It resolves the contradiction by showing that values are every bit as amenable to critical analysis and reasoned defence as factual beliefs. It also presents key qualities of a policy analysis decisively freed from the \u201cbinary view\u201d of facts and values<br \/>\nThe introduction presents the binary view and the alternative to it. Part I then examines the effects, both obvious and subtle, of the dichotomy, effects seen both in the practice of policy analysis and in our broader culture. Part II shows how policy analysis is transformed when one embraces a consistently non-binary approach. The third part addresses some of the <em>dangers<\/em> of the approach being advocated, while the conclusion discusses the role of a non-binary policy analysis in a deliberative democracy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Introduction<\/strong><br \/>\nThis chapter presents the binary view (aka fact-value dichotomy). Traditionally influential in the social sciences, the view holds that positive and normative beliefs are fundamentally distinct, the first being testable against reality and the second being intrinsically subjective. The chapter critiques the view, yet notes that it will not be buried by critique alone: a coherent alternative is needed. In policy theory today, influential alternatives such as post-positivism and constructionism share the assumption that the key problem is excessive trust in our knowledge of objective reality. They thus leave untouched the binary view\u2019s denigration of the status of normative claims. The Introduction presents a very different approach, based on the observation that our beliefs form a network, each belief being supported by others. Fact beliefs depend in various ways upon normative ones, and vice versa. One can thus say that no fact is merely factual, no norm is merely normative. Value claims need not be treated as subjective or axiomatic: they can be pulled into what J\u00fcrgen Habermas calls the \u201cvortex of argumentation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>PART I: The binary view: Effects and durability<\/strong><br \/>\nPart One presents various effects of the binary view in the \u201cpolicy world.\u201d** These range from narrow \u2013e.g. limiting thought on a particular policy problem\u2013, to mid-range \u2013shaping the practice of social science, to <em>civilizational<\/em>.<br \/>\nPart One also argues that the binary view is a very <em>convenient<\/em> one for many actors in the policy world, and quite durable, surviving even in intellectual milieux that appear hostile to it.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>**Like the arts world, or the world of sports, this is not a physical place, but a set of activities. Almost everyone steps into the \u201cpolicy world\u201d at least occasionally, when we discuss or write about things that governments are doing, or might do, to address public problems, to prevent problems from arising, to preserve the good things in our society and world, and so on.<br \/>\nWithin that broad policy world, there is a set of people engaged on an ongoing basis in some type of formal policy analysis. One can find them in government, academia, civil society organizations, and so on.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><strong>Chapter One: Some effects of the binary view<\/strong><br \/>\nThe binary view leads many writers to mask the normative content of their arguments. It also supports the belief that policy differences ultimately arise from \u201cunderlying value judgments\u201d that are not subject to reasoned assessment. This leads to \u201cend-of-the-line\u201d thinking, the view that normative debate is fated to run into fundamental differences that are beyond rational judgment, \u201cdifferences about which men (sic) can ultimately only fight,\u201d as Milton Friedman put it. The chapter undermines this foundational pessimism through a discussion of Friedman\u2019s influential illustration of an alleged foundational difference: between the lovers of freedom and advocates for equality. Contrasting Friedman\u2019s position on those two goods with that of John Rawls reveals differences that are most certainly amenable to rational analysis.<br \/>\nThe binary view also personalizes values, so that, in a normative conflict, the question becomes \u201c<em>Whose<\/em> values will prevail?\u201d Power and ego thus displace thought, and the foundation is laid for a narrow understanding of the policy analyst\u2019s role in a democracy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter two: The quest for exogenous values<\/strong><br \/>\nPolicy analysis \u2013reflection on what <em>should<\/em> be done- is inescapably value-centric, yet when shaped by the binary view it treats values as merely arbitrary preferences.<br \/>\nThis chapter explores the strategies by which binary policy analysis has evaded this problem, all of which involve the search for an external \u201csupply\u201d of values that are taken as axioms for the policy analyst. These may come from the \u201cpreferences\u201d of the elected politician, or from a supposed aggregation of individual choices, as in cost-benefit analysis (CBA). The chapter shows that both tactics are illegitimate. The first draws on a naive view of elected officials as somehow embodying the \u201cpreferences\u201d of citizens (even on issues about which the public has not in fact thought). CBA, for its part, illegitimately equates market outcomes with the preferences of \u201csociety.\u201d Its reliance on time discounting, and certain measures it uses to calculate the value of a human life, can also lead to morally repugnant conclusions, when applied to a matter such as the climate crisis.<br \/>\nThese tactics, and others explored in the chapter, all lead to the \u201cclandestine smuggling of moral values\u201d into analysis (Dahl).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter three: The durable flotsam of the binary view<\/strong><br \/>\nThe binary view is so rooted in our broader culture that its \u201cgravitational pull\u201d can capture even those who seek to distance themselves from it. Social constructionism, for example, can be a promising starting point for a critique of the binary view. But one variant of constructionism that has been very influential in the policy world, that of Anne Schneider and Helen Ingram, paradoxically rests upon the binary view.<br \/>\nSimilarly, Thomas Kuhn\u2019s work undermines the commonsensical claim that we have easy access to \u201cbrute\u201d facts, which is a vital support for the binary view. But many in the social sciences, and a number of leading policy theorists, have taken Kuhn\u2019s concept of \u201cincommensurability\u201d to mean that paradigms are conceptual <em>prisons<\/em> from which escape is unlikely, and between which dialogue will probably be fruitless. The possibility of critical dialogue between people holding different \u201cworldviews\u201d and different normative commitments is thus discounted in advance.<br \/>\nThe chapter also critiques variants of \u201chistorical revisionism\u201d that appear to break with the binary view, but reproduce a key element of it, by insulating nationalist values from all questioning and positing them as a dogmatic basis for history curricula.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter four: Convenient belief<\/strong><br \/>\nThis chapter draws on the insights of Douglas Amy to argue that the binary view is very convenient for many actors in the policy world. It can serve the interests of analysts themselves, and of politicians and various other \u201cconsumers\u201d of analysis. The binary view can do this even if no one fully believes in it.<br \/>\nSerious ethical reflection, first, can threaten the analyst\u2019s traditional role as purveyor of supposedly value-free technical advice. As for politicians: they often resort to technocratic justifications for their decisions. Yet politicians also frequently appeal to \u201cvalues voters\u201d with strident promises to \u201cdefend the family\u201d and so on. These ostensibly opposed approaches both rely on the binary view, by exempting values from critical reflection.<br \/>\nAn implication of this is that no scholarly argument \u2013including this one\u2013 will fully dislodge the binary view from the policy world. Still, careful critique can weaken the defences of the view, and thus shake the allegiance to it of at least some policy actors.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Conclusion to Part I: A world on auto-pilot<\/strong><br \/>\nThis section asks: what sort of civilization \u201cfits\u201d with the binary view? It suggests that the view can find a home only in a world shaped by the apotheosis of \u201cinstrumental\u201d or \u201cmeans-end\u201d rationality. The social world becomes structured by actors moving in contexts with clear and immediate short-term objectives: the CEO, the lobbyist, the politician, and, of course, the policy analyst.<br \/>\nNow being on \u201cautopilot\u201d is fine, so long as we are headed in the right direction. But we are not. Given the climate emergency, \u201cstaying the course\u201d will be catastrophic. The binary view intensifies the risk that we will sleepwalk across a climate change threshold.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Part II: Non-binary analysis<\/strong><br \/>\nPart II explores how policy analysis changes when we:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u2022Abandon the binary view;<br \/>\n\u2022Understand that our beliefs form a network, that our facts and norms depend upon each other;<br \/>\n\u2022Understand that this network doesn\u2019t have a final foundation; and<br \/>\n\u2022Abandon all forms of foundational pessimism, affirming that there is always something to talk about.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><strong>Chapter five: Forms of care<\/strong><br \/>\nAny intellectual approach encourages those who follow it to \u201ctake care\u201d in particular ways. A traditional analyst, for example, must take care to keep analysis independent of value and personal \u201cpreferences,\u201d and not to \u201cderive an ought from an is\u201d (Hume). This chapter shows that a non-binary approach replaces such concerns with careful exploration of the fact and value claims that underlie any policy position. A non-binary approach should also lead us to pay close <em>attention to the patterns of attention<\/em> behind any piece of policy analysis, critically examine the types of trust that support the analysis, and assess whether such trust is warranted. A non-binary approach must be attentive to the ways in which language shapes our lived reality.<br \/>\nThe chapter also argues that a non-binary approach protects even certain normative goods associated with the binary view, better than does that view itself. Max Weber, for example, argued that the clear separation of facts from values helps protect students from having professors foist their values on the class. The non-binary approach does not dismiss the concern, but extends it. It can also show that the concern reflects more than a mere personal preference (to which it is reduced within Weber\u2019s framework).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter six: Networks of belief<\/strong><br \/>\nThis chapter presents some implications for policy analysis of the networked nature of our beliefs. Networked beliefs can be held to a greater or lesser degree. This heightens the importance of who is \u201cin the room where it happens.\u201d In an unrepresentative policy-making bureaucracy, certain issues may be intellectually understood, but not viscerally <em>felt<\/em>, and thus vanish from view during the policy process. Further, we are never fully aware of just what we do and don\u2019t believe. Objectivity can thus only emerge within communities of analysts, or citizens.<br \/>\nFinally: any particular belief, whether normative or factual, is sustained by other beliefs in our network, sustained <em>more or less solidly<\/em>. Any element in the network has its supports. On the other hand, any belief can be called into question, and may crumble in the face of serious scrutiny. In this sense, values can be true or false; so too can our understanding of our interests, including the \u201cnational interest.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter seven: Networks of beliefs <em>and<\/em> practices<\/strong><br \/>\nThis chapter extends the analysis of the previous one. The complex relations between our actions and our beliefs, and the intricate web formed by our actions and goals, both have important implications for a non-binary policy analysis. Since changes in our social milieu, for example, can affect our network of beliefs, our interests and even our habits, policy need not always attack \u201croot causes\u201d directly.<br \/>\nThe chapter rejects policy approaches that assume a world neatly chopped into means and ends. Certain practices pursue multiple ends, and many important goods such as happiness or freedom are both means and ends. An analysis that assumes that we know precisely what people seek in a particular activity, such as work life, may thus neglect and undermine important human values.<br \/>\nFinally, the chapter returns to a point developed in previous chapters: conscious attention is a scarce resource. This points to both the essential nature of habits, and the potential usefulness \u2013and danger\u2013 of policy \u201cnudges.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter eight: Decision contexts<\/strong><br \/>\nReal world \u201cdecision contexts\u201d \u2013spaces in which one or more people arrive at a decision on some question\u2013 can be problematic in a number of ways. Decision-makers can be inattentive, or rushed, or believe that the job of analysis is merely to provide justifications for a pre-fabricated choice. The chapter uses passages from Plato and Shakespeare to illustrate such problems.<br \/>\nA healthy society requires healthy decision contexts. One (delicate) task of the responsible analyst is to try to nudge particular contexts towards that ideal. This requires abandonment of the \u201csubservient analyst model\u201d: in a healthy public service, the analyst should not accept as unquestioned axioms the beliefs, whether normative or positive, of elected officials.<br \/>\nAll this poses a particular challenge to the young analyst: they must find a way to harmonize their need to earn a living with a desire to take pride in their work. In this imperfect world, there will inevitably be times when they feel torn being doing the safe and \u201cprudent\u201d thing, and doing what they believe the interest of the public, perhaps even of humanity, requires.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter nine: The analyst in context<\/strong><br \/>\nJ\u00fcrgen Habermas likens modern bureaucracies and markets. In both \u201csystems,\u201d true communicative action is unnecessary: market decisions can be \u201csteered\u201d by anonymous price signals, while bureaucratic decisions are steered by power. Were this true, there would be little space for the non-binary policy analysis advocated in this book. But Habermas\u2019s depiction is overly simple. In practice, while the consistent pursuit of a non-binary approach can lead to tensions, this will not always be the case. The \u201cforms of care\u201d exercised in a non-binary policy in fact characterize any thoughtful analyst. In many contexts, this will be greatly appreciated. In other cases, the analyst is not so fortunate.<br \/>\nIn trying to improve the quality of their particular decision-contexts, analysts need to be lay anthropologists and sociologists, seeking to grasp the folkways of the strange culture in which they have landed, and its structures of power and influence.<br \/>\nA healthy society also needs alternative spaces of reflection, in which analysis is addressed not to official decision-makers, but to citizens as a whole. By producing well-founded and \u201cusable\u201d knowledge, such civil society spaces can support and improve the health of the official decision process.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Part III: Caveats<\/strong><br \/>\nThe practice of policy analysis can have serious impacts \u2013for better and worse\u2013 on people\u2019s lives. So it is irresponsible to advocate for a particular approach to the practice without acknowledging potential risks of that approach.<br \/>\nPart III considers two dangers of the non-binary approach advocated in this work: the magnification of expert power, and an exaggerated optimism concerning the power of dialogue.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter ten: Experts and expertise<\/strong><br \/>\nChapters 10 and 11 consider potential dangers of a non-binary policy analysis. Various thinkers have identified threats posed by experts and expertise. One is the emergence of technocracy, or expert domination, which Weber viewed as an inevitable byproduct of bureaucracy. As the bureaucratic elite is generally drawn from a narrow segment of society, technocracy can reinforce class and racial bias in state decision-making.<br \/>\nOn its own, a non-binary approach will not resolve all the problems of expertise, as these are rooted in the nature of society as a whole. Indeed, by emphasizing the centrality of ongoing deliberation on positive and normative matters, it runs the risk of favouring the domination of a new type of expert, experienced in what Alvin Gouldner termed the \u201cculture of critical discourse.\u201d<br \/>\nStill, if supporting structures are in place, a non-binary approach can alleviate some problems of expertise. It encourages the development of alternative spaces for deliberation, in which experts engage in serious dialogue with ordinary citizens. Because it emphasizes the intricate interplay of positive and normative questions in any policy debate, it can challenge the monopoly of influence of narrow expertise (such as that of economists on questions such as the minimum wage).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter eleven: The limits of dialogue<\/strong><br \/>\nA central theme of this book is that \u201cThere is always something to talk about, if we\u2019re willing to talk\u201d: dialogue is not destined to founder when it reaches \u201cultimate values,\u201d as foundational pessimists claim (chapter 2). Yet we must avoid \u201cdialogic utopianism,\u201d an exaggerated optimism concerning the power of dialogue. Open-minded discussion will yield many fruits, yet not always result in full agreement, because of the \u201cburdens of judgment\u201d (Rawls).<br \/>\nNor can dialogue allow the policy analyst to embrace a pure \u201cfacilitator\u201d role and evade the question of truth: truth judgments are unavoidable even in a dialogue-oriented policy approach.<br \/>\nThere may be tensions between various goals of policy consultation. A participatory process structured to help us find truth on an issue may differ greatly from one that seeks to arrive at a decision that citizens, or some particular group of citizens, can embrace as their own.<br \/>\nFinally, the chapter draws on insights from Johan Huizinga and Thucydides to stress that people inevitably engage in dialogue with mixed motives, which can have problematic effects.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><br \/>\nThis chapter opens with a brief review of the book. It then offers last thoughts on a core claim: a non-binary approach leads to a richer understanding of the role of the policy analyst in a democracy. A responsible analyst cannot allow themselves a \u201cnormative slumber\u201d: a critical normative awareness is not an outlook to be held in storage, dusted off only when needed. It is always needed.<br \/>\nThe analyst has no ethical obligation meekly to accept the normative premises of elected officials. No democratic constitution proclaims that the \u201cpreferences\u201d of those officials are to reign supreme, that elected leaders are to decide matters without reflection and challenge. The subservient analyst model (chapter eight) does not emerge from democratic theory: it is a corruption of it, because it undermines one of the key premises for a healthy democracy, the widespread practice of deliberative judgment.<br \/>\nNor should the analyst view the \u201cwill of the people\u201d \u2013however that is discerned\u2013 as sacred. When majority opinion supports discrimination against minorities, for example, or refuses to accept the seriousness of the climate crisis, the analyst must challenge that opinion as best they can.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Facts, values, and the policy world Annotated contents Policy analysts trained in various social sciences face a generally unacknowledged contradiction. Traditionally, mainstream social science has assumed that there is a gulf \u2013a \u201cdichotomy\u201d\u2013 between facts and values, and that rigorous social science must be as uncontaminated by values as possible. But policy analysis, as reflection [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_relevanssi_hide_post":"","_relevanssi_hide_content":"","_relevanssi_pin_for_all":"","_relevanssi_pin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_unpin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_include_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_exclude_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_no_append":"","_relevanssi_related_not_related":"","_relevanssi_related_posts":"","_relevanssi_noindex_reason":"","_mi_skip_tracking":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_active":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_note":"","_exactmetrics_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Fact-value book summary - Phil Ryan<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Facts, values, and the policy world Annotated contents Policy analysts trained in various social sciences face a generally unacknowledged contradiction.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/fact-value-book-summary\/\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"15 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/fact-value-book-summary\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/philryan\/fact-value-book-summary\/\",\"name\":\"Fact-value book summary - 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