Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
The ending of the Cold War is the most dramatic historical event of recent times, and the realist paradigm has failed both to explain and to anticipate it. This is important because in the social sciences such failures have had major psychological impacts on thinking (see p. 73 above). Logically, a single dramatic historical event is only one case, but psychologically, for a discipline that lacks scientific rigor, it is nevertheless unsettling. It raises serious questions about whether the paradigm (and its theoretical variants) are an adequate guide to the world, either intellectually or in terms of policy (see Kratochwil 1993). Such a failure presents dramatic evidence that the paradigm's understanding about the world may be fundamentally wrong. What history is revealing is not simply an incompleteness or lapse, but a piece of evidence so clear and so bald in its contradiction of theory that it cannot be ignored. This naturally makes one wonder whether there may be other historical events of significance that are being ignored or obfuscated by the paradigm.
These are serious concerns for any paradigm, on two grounds. First, if, in fact, a paradigm has failed to anticipate or explain a major historical event, then in what sense is the knowledge it is providing of any great relevance? The failure of scholars guided by realism to anticipate the ending of the Cold War, and particularly the manner in which it would end, speaks volumes about the ability of the paradigm to help understand change.
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