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"Components of positivism"

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Blogger Simon said...

Finally, there is a sixth premise that has also created debate but seems less intrusive to the practice of innovative social science -- the insistence on the fact-value distinction. "Positive" science has to do with the discovery of facts, whereas ethics or policy stidies have to do with values.

I agree with pretty much everything you've written, but I tend to think that this is a fairly major point and you gloss over it. A corollary to the fact-value distinction is the ontological nature of theories. As positivists believe theories describe the world, critics of positivism hold that theories also constitute the social world. It seems to me this raises fairly major questions about the political consequences of social science research.

June 13, 2008 at 7:53 AM

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