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Human Inquiry and Science

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What kinds of evidence are adequate to demonstrate the existence of things not ... Idiographic and nomothetic explanation. Inductive and deductive theory ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Inquiry and Science


1
Chapter 1
  • Human Inquiry and Science

2
How do you know what you know?
  • Experiential reality things you know as a
    function of your direct experience in the
    world.  
  • Agreement reality things you consider to be real
    because youve been told they are real.

3
What kinds of evidence are adequate to
demonstrate the existence of things not directly
experienced?
  • Logical (theory)
  • Empirical (reality)

4
What is reality?
  • Premodern view  we see things as they really are
  • Modern view  people with different points of
    view see reality differently ("beauty is in the
    eye of the beholder")
  • Postmodern view  reality does not exist
    independently of our points of view about it.
    There is no such thing as objective reality.

5
Scientific (and social scientific) methodology
  • Epistemology the science of knowing
  • How do you know what you think you know?
  • What is reality?
  • Methodology the science of finding out
  • Systematic
  • Developed by a scientific community
  • Detailed steps in process
  • Quality control
  • Peer review (intersubjectivity)
  • Replication

6
Is social science really scientific?
  • Some objections to social science as real
    science A hypothetical conversation

7
Social scientific logic and theory - searching
for regularities in social life
  • Probabilistic
  • Social regularities involve aggregate actions and
    situations of social groups
  • Elements of social scientific theory are not
    people, but variables.

8
Variables
  • Vary across units of analysis
  • Examples
  • Individuals gender, age, level of formal
    education, type of occupation, attitude toward
    abortion
  • Small groups level of cohesion, frequency of
    interaction, ethnocentrism
  • Societies GNP, type of political structure,
    population size

9
Attributes
  • Characteristics or qualities that describe a unit
    of analysis
  • Examples
  • Individuals male, female, 22 years old, high
    school graduate, plumber, favors abortion
  • Social groups low cohesion, meets once a week,
    hostile toward outsiders
  • Societies high GNP, communist government, 75
    million people
  • Variables are logical groupings of attributes

10
Two major types of variables in social scientific
theory, methods, and data analysis
  • Independent variable variable that is presumed
    or found to influence/affect/cause another
    variable
  • Dependent variable variable that is presumed or
    found to be influenced/affected/caused by an
    independent variable

11
Relationship between two variables
12
Same relationship displayed in a table
Percentages Summed to 100 Down Columns

13
No relationship between variables
14
No relationship - 1
15
No relationship - 2
16
General Social Survey
  • Omnibus survey many topics
  • Data collected from a national probability sample
    of American adults
  • Face-to-face interview
  • Data collected every year or two since 1972
  • Codebook on GSS website

17
Approaches to social research
  • Idiographic and nomothetic explanation
  • Inductive and deductive theory
  • Quantitative and qualitative data
  • Pure and applied research
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