Dissecting the Social
Over the past few decades serious reservations have been expressed about the explanatory power of sociological theory and research. In this important book, leading social theorist Peter Hedström outlines the foundations of an analytically oriented sociology that seeks to address this criticism. Building on his earlier influential contributions to contemporary debates, Professor Hedström argues for a systematic development of sociological theory so that it has the explanatory power and precision to inform sociological research and understanding. He discusses various mechanisms of action and interaction and shows how strong links can be forged between the micro and the macro, and between theory and empirical research. Combining approaches to theory and methodology and using extensive examples to illustrate how they might be applied, this clear, concise and original book will appeal to a broad range of social scientists.
- Represents an approach to the explanation of social phenomena
- Discusses a range of issues of fundamental importance for the social sciences
- Combines approaches to theory and methodology and uses extensive examples to illustrate how to apply them
Reviews & endorsements
"Dissecting the Social is a substantial and important contribution to the emerging paradigm of mechanism-based explanation." -Andreas Pickel, Canadian Journal of Sociology Online
"This book...is an enjoyable and important addition to the meager library of serious philosophy of social science. It gives pleasure to read because it is clearly conceived and elegantly written, and because...it is chock full of examples of current research. And Hedström's book is important because it emphasizes the thesis that to explain facts of a type is to exhibit or hypothesize the mechanisms that brings them about." -Mario Bunge, Philosophy of the Social Sciences
Product details
December 2005Paperback
9780521796675
188 pages
229 × 151 × 12 mm
0.31kg
28 b/w illus. 8 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. The analytical tradition in sociology
- 2. Social mechanisms and explanatory theory
- 3. Action and interaction
- 4. Social interaction and social change
- 5. On causal modelling
- 6. Quantitative research, agent-based modelling, and theories of the social (with Yvonne Ã…berg)
- 7. Coda
- References.