Philosophical Foundations of the Three Sociologies

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A01=Ted Benton
Abstract Theoretical Entities
Althusser's Work
anti-positivism
Author_Ted Benton
Category=JHBA
Common External Characteristics
Comte's Distinction
conception
Deductive Nomological Model
Dephlogisticated Air
Direct Observational Understanding
Durkheim's Argument
Ecole Normale Superieure
epistemology
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forms
Hypothetico Deductive Account
ideologies
ideology
Kant's Noumenal
Kant's Noumenal World
knowledge
Logical Empiricism
Macro-level Regularities
materialist philosophy
natural science of history
Neo-Kantian Movement
neo-Kantianism
Noumenal World
Peter Winch
phenomenal
Phenomenal Forms
positivist
practical
Practical Adequacy
Practical Ideologies
scientific
scientific methodology
social theory
theoretical
Theoretical Ideologies
Universal Statement
Verification Criterion
Verification Principle
Winch's Argument

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138788077
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Aug 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An extended historical and philosophical argument, this book will be a valuable text for all students of the philosophy of the social sciences. It discusses the serious alternatives to positivist and empiricist accounts of the physical sciences, and poses the debate between naturalism and anti-naturalism in the social sciences in new terms. Recent materialist and realist philosophies of science make possible a defence of naturalism which does not make concessions to positivism and which recognizes the force of several of the anti-positivist arguments from the main anti-naturalist (neo-Kantian) tradition.

The author presents a critical evaluation of empiricist and positivist theories of knowledge, and investigates some classic attempts at using them to provide the philosophical foundation for a scientific sociology. He takes the Kantian critique of empiricism as the starting point for the main anti-positivist and anti-naturalist philosophical approaches to the social studies. He goes on to investigate the inadequacy of post-Kantian arguments from Rickert, Weber, Winch and others, both against non-positivist forms of naturalism and as the possible source of a distinctive philosophical foundation for the social studies.

The book concludes with a critical investigation of the Marxian tradition and an attempt to establish the possibility of a materialist and realist defence of the project of a natural science of history, which escapes the fundamental flaws of both positivist and neo-Kantian attempts at philosophical foundation.

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