Microfoundations, Method, and Causation: On the Philosophy of the Social SciencesTransaction Publishers - 272 strán (strany) The convergence of inexactness and intelligibility in social phenomena makes social and historical inquiry fascinating. The social world is not chaotic and social processes are not unrelated strings of events. We can explain social patterns in ways that illuminate social outcomes. At the same time, the social world does not constitute a closed, determined system of variables and outcomes, in the same way that quantum chemistry systemizes the properties of all physical structures. Instead, the social sciences are a tangle of cross-cutting, overlapping sets of theories, hypotheses, causal models, idealized facts, interpretive principles, and bodies of empirical findings that may illuminate but do not reduce. In "Microfoundations, Method, and Causation, "Daniel Little combines a purely philosophical perspective on social science, with the theoretical and empirical practice of working scientists. Part 1 focuses on the theory of popular politics constructed within the context of analytical Marxism. In part 2, Little asks if rational choice theory provides an adequate basis for explaining patterns of social, political, and economic behavior in traditional China. The essays in part 3 reveal the philosophy of social science as understood by philosophers. Here, Little probes issues of objectivity, empiricism, and generalizations, and makes the case that social generalizations are not akin to laws of nature. Little's approach to social science research effectively points out the limits inherent in social theories, as well as questions and answers that may be posed to the social world. In a clear, compelling, and honest fashion, he urges both the social scientist and the philosopher who studies the social sciences, to make the most of empirical methods of research to develop hypotheses about the social world. As such, this is a must read for sociologists, social theorists, and philosophers. |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 88.
... economic behavior in traditional China ? Does rational choice theory succeed in functioning as an explanatory hypothesis with empirical content in this field ? Or , as some would have it , does the Asianist need to be a particularist ...
... economic and domestic arrangements based on the availabil- ity of lower costs ( or increased convenience ) afforded by the new trans- portation technologies . The importance of identifying causal mechanisms underlying social outcomes ...
... economy ; Marxist political scientists are interested in the ways in which state policy in a capitalist democracy serves the needs of the capitalist economic structure ; Marxist sociolo- gists are interested in analyzing patterns of ...
... economy and his analysis of political behavior that will show that Marx's central explanations are in fact consistent ... economic and political change — e.g . , the logic of development of capi- talism , the transition from feudalism to ...
... economic institutions in which they choose and given their objective material interests . This approach therefore resorts to a hand- ful of analytical tools based on the assumption that individuals make calculated choices in their economic ...
Obsah
xiii | |
25 | |
Marxism and Popular Politics | 49 |
Explanation in Area Studies | 75 |
RationalChoice Theory and Asian Studies | 77 |
Collective Action and the Traditional Village | 99 |
Identity Politics Microfoundations for Asian Studies | 121 |
The Brenner Debate | 129 |
Objectivity Generalization and Causation | 167 |
Evidence and Objectivity in the Social Sciences | 169 |
Causal Explanation in the Social Sciences | 193 |
An Experiment in Causal Reasoning | 211 |
On the Scope and Limits of Generalization in the Social Sciences | 233 |
References | 253 |
Index | 265 |
The HighLevel Equilibrium Trap | 147 |