The Role of Cognitive Processes in Unifying the Behavioral Sciences
... the behavioral sciences operating at the level of the individual. While gene-culture coevolutionary theory is a form of “ultimate” explanation that does not predict, the rational actor model provides a “proximate” description of behavior that can be tested in the laboratory and real life, and is th ...
... the behavioral sciences operating at the level of the individual. While gene-culture coevolutionary theory is a form of “ultimate” explanation that does not predict, the rational actor model provides a “proximate” description of behavior that can be tested in the laboratory and real life, and is th ...
Should We Still Compare the Social Sciences to the Natural Sciences?
... 3. The social sciences are not sciences because their subject matter (human beings and their social interactions) cannot be the object of a science. According to the humanistic view, the social world does not consist of facts, but rather of actions performed in the context of purposes, intentions, m ...
... 3. The social sciences are not sciences because their subject matter (human beings and their social interactions) cannot be the object of a science. According to the humanistic view, the social world does not consist of facts, but rather of actions performed in the context of purposes, intentions, m ...
theoretical pluralism and sociological theory
... the most vigorous advocate of scientific theorizing among today’s leading theorists. If we take a grand total, we get the following results: 39 percent of the articles published fell within social theory, 34 percent within sociological theory, and 21 percent under theorizing about the classics (6 pe ...
... the most vigorous advocate of scientific theorizing among today’s leading theorists. If we take a grand total, we get the following results: 39 percent of the articles published fell within social theory, 34 percent within sociological theory, and 21 percent under theorizing about the classics (6 pe ...
Chicano Social Work: A Critical Analysis
... functioning that are abstract, general, and universal. Hence, person, time, and place are regarded as sources of error, "noise", to be controlled, largely, through experimental and survey methodologies. This means that this natural science conception denies the historicity of the social world, it al ...
... functioning that are abstract, general, and universal. Hence, person, time, and place are regarded as sources of error, "noise", to be controlled, largely, through experimental and survey methodologies. This means that this natural science conception denies the historicity of the social world, it al ...
Cloak, F.T., Jr. 1976b
... I think the equivocation of 'cultural' can be overcome simply by staying conscious of the two senses; by thinking and speaking in terms of cultural instructions and repertories on the one hand, and in terms of cultural behaviors and products on the other. Equivocal use of the word 'social', however, ...
... I think the equivocation of 'cultural' can be overcome simply by staying conscious of the two senses; by thinking and speaking in terms of cultural instructions and repertories on the one hand, and in terms of cultural behaviors and products on the other. Equivocal use of the word 'social', however, ...
The Sense of the Past and the Origins of Sociology Philip Abrams
... located social interaction but by inferentially necessary connections between concepts. Discussions of the decline of community, of the traditional working class and of the problems of modernization in the context of contrasts between "developing" and "modern" social systems are among the better kno ...
... located social interaction but by inferentially necessary connections between concepts. Discussions of the decline of community, of the traditional working class and of the problems of modernization in the context of contrasts between "developing" and "modern" social systems are among the better kno ...
Ideology, Scientific Theory, and Social Work
... In addition, it is important to recognize that theories can become self-fulfilling or self-refuting based on our own attitudes and beliefs. For example, the beliefs that we hold about ourselves, our clients, our relationships, our families, our society, and our economic and political systems can inf ...
... In addition, it is important to recognize that theories can become self-fulfilling or self-refuting based on our own attitudes and beliefs. For example, the beliefs that we hold about ourselves, our clients, our relationships, our families, our society, and our economic and political systems can inf ...