Mention896160

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so:text The word 'policy' generally refers to the principles that govern action directed towards given ends. Any study of policy therefore should concern itself with three things — what we want , how we get it , and who are 'we,' that is, what is the nature of the organization or group concerned. Science is concerned with means rather than with ends. The study of "what we want" extends beyond the boundaries of the social sciences into the field of ethics. It is not the business of the social sciences to evaluate the ultimate ends of human activity. The social sciences, therefore, cannot give a final answer to the question whether any given policy is right. The social scientist can study what people say they want, what they think they want and may even infer from their behaviour what they really want, but it is not the business of science to say whether people want right things. (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Kenneth_Boulding
so:description Principles of economic policy, 1958 (en)
so:description 1950s (en)
qkg:hasContext qkg:Context441955
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qkg:Quotation849078 qkg:hasMention
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