Conceptions of Inquiry

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Artificial Satellite
Category=QD
Confers
deductive
Deductive Nomological Explanation
Demarcation
Demarcation Lines
Duplicate Proportion
epistemology
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Experimental Philosophy
explanation
Follow
Held
Independent
indulgence
interdisciplinary inquiry approaches
ISAAC
ISRAEL SCHEFFLER
JOHN STUART MILL
jubilee
Jubilee Indulgence
Main
Mathematical Inquiry
methodology in research
nomological
objectivity in knowledge
Observational Fidelity
philosophy
philosophy of science
Reduction Sentences
science
sciences
scientific rationality
social
Social Science Research
social sciences theory
Superimposed
systematic
Systematic Public Enterprise
Truth Criteria
Vera Causa
Vice Versa
Violated

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138432604
  • Weight: 810g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A number of significant contributions have been made, both to specific intellectual disciplines and on the broader philosophical front. by researches into the nature of inquiry. The papers in this collection illustrate a number of such areas of debate in mathematics. natural science. social studies and history. allowing an appraisal of their importance in their own context as well as comparisons across disciplinary frontiers. Some extracts are undoubtedly classic - Plato on mathematics. Newton on physics and J.S. Mill on social science. However. most contributions are more contemporary - work by theorists such as Foucault and Hofstadter. and by practitioners such as Bondi and Einstein. Mathematics is considered under a number of headings. from Plato's 'eternal truth' to Hodgkin's 'social practice'. Its relation to the 'real world' is discussed in a number of essays. In the section on natural science various strands of the Popper-Kuhn debate can be followed. including the questions of progress. rationality and the demarcation of science as opposed to 'pseudo­science'. A similar set of problems is presented in the sections on social inquiry. Here the scientific status of sociology, anthro­pology, history and the like is at issue. Some writers argue that social inquiry is quite distinct from science. whilst others. in­cluding Hempel, deny that there is any essential difference between the human and the natural sciences. The final sections are devoted to more general problems. Extracts from Hume, Hirst and Foucault discuss the isolation and definition of forms of knowledge; the prevailing views of the objectivity of science are challenged by Hanson and Kuhn; and the role of values in social inquiry is debated by Weber, Gouldner and Hesse.

Stuart Brown, John Fauvel, Ruth Finnegan, Open University