THE ONTOLOGICAL STATUS AND GNOSEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION OF THE CONCEPT OF A NEW WORLD ORDER
Abstract
This article analyzes the ontological status and gnoseological interpretation of the concept of the "new world order." The paper examines the concept’s emergence, essence, and philosophical-methodological foundations, as well as its place in contemporary international relations theory. The approaches of the schools of realism, liberalism, and constructivism to this concept are comparatively analyzed and evaluated in terms of ontological existence and cognitive possibilities. The article places particular emphasis on the status of the new world order as an objective reality and on the epistemological limits of its scientific understanding.
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