ABSTRACT

Is social science really a science at all, and if so in what sense? This is the first question that any course on the philosophy of the social sciences must tackle. In this brief introduction, Malcolm Williams gives students the grounding that will enable them to discuss the issues involved with confidence. He looks at:
* The historical development of natural science and its distinctive methodology
* the case in favour of an objective science of the social which follows the same rules
* The arguments of social constructionists, interpretative sociologists and others against objectivity and even science itself
* recent developments in natural science - for instance the rise of complexity theory and the increased questioning of positivism - which bring it closer to some of the key arguments of social science.
Throughout, the book is illustrated with short clear examples taken from the actual practice of social science research and from popular works of natural science which will illuminate the debate for all students whatever their background.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter |20 pages

Where did science come from?

chapter |21 pages

Science and its method

chapter |21 pages

Social science as science

chapter |17 pages

Against science

chapter |17 pages

Against science in social science

chapter |18 pages

Science, objectivity and ethics

chapter |20 pages

New science and new social science

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

The science of social science