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The Search for a Methodology of Social Science (review)Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 19 (2): 391-393. 1988.
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108Social theory without wholesHuman Studies 7 (3-4). 1984.Language is the tradition of nations; each generation describes what it sees, but it uses words transmitted from the past. When a great entity like the British Constitution has continued in connected outward sameness, but hidden inner change, for many ages, every generation inherits a series of inapt words — of maxims once true, but of which the truth is ceasing or has ceased. As a man’s family go on muttering in his maturity incorrect phrases derived from a just observation of his early youth, …Read more
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133Political Epistemology, Experts, and the Aggregation of KnowledgeSpontaneous Generations 1 (1): 36. 2007.Expert claims routinely “affect, combat, refute, and negate” someone or some faction or grouping of persons. When scientists proclaim the truth of Darwinism, they refute, negate, and whatnot the Christian view of the creation, and thus Christians. When research is done on racial differences, it affects, negates, and so on, those who are negatively characterized. This is why Phillip Kitcher argues that it should be banned. Some truths are too dangerous to ever inquire into, because, he reasons, e…Read more
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175Many approaches, but few arrivals: Merton and the columbia model of theory constructionPhilosophy of the Social Sciences 39 (2): 174-211. 2009.Robert Merton's essays on theories of the middle range and his essays on functional explanation and the structural approach are among the most influential in the history of sociology. But their import is a puzzle. He explicitly allied himself with some of the most extreme scientistic formalists and contributed to and endorsed the Columbia model of theory construction. But Merton never responded to criticisms by Ernest Nagel of his arguments or acknowledged the rivalry between Lazarsfeld and Herb…Read more
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105Emile Durkheim: sociologist and moralist (edited book)Routledge. 1993.This volume presents an overview of Durkheim's thought and is representative of the best of contemporary Durkheim scholarship.
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109Where explanation ends: Understanding as the place the spade turns in the social sciencesStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (3): 532-538. 2013.Explanations implicitly end with something that makes sense, and begin with something that does not make sense. A statistical relationship, for example, a numerical fact, does not make sense; an explanation of this relationship adds something, such as causal information, which does make sense, and provides an endpoint for the sense-making process. Does social science differ from natural science in this respect? One difference is that in the natural sciences, models are what need ‘‘understanding.…Read more
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