Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 September 2009
Before the Civil War the social sciences, like most of the loosely constructed fields of humane learning in America, had led a fragmented existence. Economics and combinations of history and politics had established presences in the antebellum colleges, though subordinate to clerical influence and the moral philosophy curriculum, while men of affairs took up these subjects as part of the larger policy debates of the era. After the war, growing wealth, university expansion, and increasing specialization of labor and knowledge opened the way to the establishment of independent social science disciplines. What galvanized social science practitioners into self-consciousness and gave the new disciplines their American shape was a crisis in the national ideology of American exceptionalism, which gathered force through the Gilded Age. On one level the crisis was connected to the problem of intellectual authority, as science increasingly discredited the apologetic stance and naive resort to divine providence of the established voices in American culture. On another level, the crisis grew out of the social and political challenges of the Gilded Age, as Civil War and Reconstruction and then rapid industrialization appeared to test whether America could sustain the principles that defined her place in history.
The Gilded Age crisis
Among the Whiggish class of clerics and men of affairs whose centrist versions of social science had predominated in education and politics, there were some who responded quickly and forcefully to the wide-ranging cultural and social upheavals of the Gilded Age.
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