Structure of Social Science

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A01=Michael H. Lessnoff
Author_Michael H. Lessnoff
Auxiliary Hypotheses
Category=JHBA
Category=QD
Cloud Chamber
Common Language
Constant Succession
Dysfunctional Relation
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fact value distinction
functionalist explanation
functionalist theory
general laws
Gresham's Law
Gresham’s Law
Ideal Typical Theory
individual versus society
Inductive Support
Inter-molecular Bonds
Kendall's Tau
Kendall’s Tau
laws of nature
Mature Capitalist Cultures
Measles Virus
Normal Body Temperature
philosophical foundations of social research
philosophy
philosophy of science
physical science
physical science model
Probabilistic Law
Snow Melts
social life
social science
Social Science Concepts
Social Science Laws
social scientific methodology
Social Scientist
social scientists
Social System
Societal Survival
sociological empiricism
statistical correlations
statistical significance analysis
Survival Sense
Teleological Explanation
Teleological Laws
tests of significance
the individual
Vice-versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032110264
  • Weight: 140g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1974, this book provided a most useful introductory survey of all the major philosophical issues relating to the social sciences at the time. While it covers a remarkable amount of ground in a short space, it is never superficial, for its lucid and careful analysis does full justice to the complexities and controversies of the subject. Nor is it merely a survey, for, while putting all points of view with scrupulous fairness, the author never fails to make clear his own, and to support it with reasoned argument.

The book’s basic framework is a comparison of physical and social science, and in this context the author examines the problems of the mental aspect of social life, general laws, the individual and the social, explanation, and the relation of fact to value. He is far from advocating (as is often done) the wholesale acceptance or rejection of the ‘physical science model’ in the social sciences – rather, he carefully considers the various elements of the model in relation to the nature of social life. A noteworthy feature of this book is the philosophical analysis of statistical correlations and tests of significance, which bulk so large in the practice of social scientists, yet are all too seldom discussed in books of this kind. Also of special interest is the penetrating and original analysis of functionalist explanation in social science. Students of the social sciences and of philosophy will find this an admirable introduction to an important aspect of their respective disciplines.

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