
The Expanded Social Scientist's Bestiary: A Guide to Fabled Threats to, and Defenses of, Naturalistic Social Science Subsequent Edition
Author(s): D. C. Phillips (Author)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
- Publication Date: 22 Nov. 2000
- Edition: Subsequent
- Language: English
- Print length: 296 pages
- ISBN-10: 0847698904
- ISBN-13: 9780847698905
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Should be required reading for all Ph.D. candidates in social science. It is a mind clearing analysis of the highest order, prophylactic and curative of the numerous methodological and substantive ills that afflict us. It is especially needed today when the ‘positivist-bashers’ are using the Vienna Circle’s mistakes and Kuhn’s exaggerations for obscurantist purposes. — Paul E. Meehl, Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science
This is vintage D. C. Phillips. A spirited, wide-ranging, postpositivist apologia for a naturalistic interpretation of the social sciences. This expanded new edition examines the ‘habits’ of two new fashionable beasts known as narrative research and social constructionism and offers a neo-Popperian account of falsificationism. In substance and style, The Bestiary displays Phillips’ unswerving commitment to reasoned argument, empirical grounding, and the regulative ideals of truth and objectivity asthe foundations for sound social science. This book is a must-read for any scholar seeking to come to terms with a contemporary account of naturalism in the social sciences… — Thomas A. Schwandt, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
This is vintage D. C. Phillips. A spirited, wide-ranging, postpositivist apologia for a naturalistic interpretation of the social sciences. This expanded new edition examines the ‘habits’ of two new fashionable beasts known as narrative research and social constructionism and offers a neo-Popperian account of falsificationism. In substance and style, The Bestiary displays Phillips’ unswerving commitment to reasoned argument, empirical grounding, and the regulative ideals of truth and objectivity as the foundations for sound social science. This book is a must-read for any scholar seeking to come to terms with a contemporary account of naturalism in the social sciences. — Thomas A. Schwandt, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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