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Book SynopsisTable of Contents*Frontmatter, pg. i*Preface, pg. vii*Preface to the Fifth Printing, pg. xi*Acknowledgments, pg. xv*Contents, pg. xvii*Introductory, pg. 1*Chapter I. Theory of Scientific Method: Facts and Logic, pg. 27*Chapter II. Theory of Scientific Method (Continued): Causality, Tests, Prediction, pg. 73*Chapter III. Theory of Scientific Value Relativism (Value Alternativism), pg. 117*Chapter IV. Theory of Justice and the Impact on it of Scientific Method and Value Relativism, pg. 136*Chapter V. Precursors and Cousins, pg. 165*Chapter VI. The Rise of Scientific Value Relativism, pg. 207*Chapter VII. The Revolt, pg. 261*Chapter VIII. Twentieth-Century Attempts to Identify Highest Values, pg. 302*Chapter IX. Factual, Not Logical, Links between Is and Ought, pg. 367*Chapter X. Universal Postulates of Justice, pg. 387*Chapter XI. Truth and Justice, pg. 404*Chapter XII. Impossibility (Limited Possibility), pg. 417*Chapter XIII. Twentieth-Century Political Science and the Belief in God, pg. 456*Results, pg. 480*Appendix A. Note Regarding a Planned Second Volume, pg. 495*Appendix B. Miscellaneous Notes on Special Questions and on Literature, pg. 499*Supplementary Notes on Literature, pg. 575*Index of Names, pg. 581*Subject Index, pg. 588