Theory in Social Science: I. What Is A Theory?
Theory in Social Science: I. What Is A Theory?
I. What is a theory?
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actually testable per say. Can organize the subject matter of a field (or sub-field in social science) for generations. Give a general understanding about
Assumptions regarding subject matter What are the important problems What are acceptable methods Rational choice theory assumes people calculate the costs and benefits of actions and act accordingly. People are basically rational Symbolic interaction theory assumes that our actions are based on the construction of meaning, identities, definitions of the situation
Examples:
2. Theories of the middle range what we have been talking about. These are generated using the frameworks and assumptions of paradigms. Examples: Deterrence theory (from rational choice) Identity theory (from S.I.) 3. Close to data often simply empirical generalizations
1. What is an abstract concept? An abstract word is a word that summarizes many concrete observations and stands for what they have in common. Democracy is a term for a particular kind of government, with certain characteristics (voting by the people governed, for example). Dog refers to a particular category of animal that has a set of describable characteristics (4 legs, fur, barking (usually), a tail (usually), etc.) 2. In social science, concepts are ways of summing up a set of specific behaviors or qualities one has observed and trying to put them into a higher level of abstraction. E.g., self-esteem, altruism, social class, prejudice, complexity (of organizations), GNP (in economics) 3. Conceptualization is the process of specifying what we mean by a term. Let's take some of the concepts I just listed and say what they mean.
2. There can be univariate and bivariate propositions. A univariate proposition is one involving only one variable E.g., The majority of students on the Madison campus are in favor of some
form of affirmative action. Or, most Americans are in favor of the death penalty. A bivariate proposition states a relationship (expected or observed) between two variables bi -variate -- such that a change in one implies a change in the other.
Theory in Social Science < B. The idea of paradigm shifts: Thomas Kuhn, The Structure
Revolutions Of Scientific
1. Normal science stage 2. Crisis stage Theories develop problems New theories predict better than old theories Does this mean the new theory takes over? No. Why not? Commitments, emotional investment, ego-incolvement Social group support, sanctions, norms Things that can happen Refusal to publish the new, outlandish results Ostracise or ridicule the people with the new ideas (e.g. Tolmaniacs) 3. Succession stage new paradigm eventually takes over as amount of data piles up and old model becomes untenable.
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approximations to truth but no theory is ever true. They are only more or less useful.