The unique and the general: Toward a philosophy of sociology

Philosophy of Science 15 (3):192-210 (1948)
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Abstract

1. Philosophy of Science. The term “philosophy of science” is used here to refer to the study of the approaches and methodologies of the sciences. By “approach” is understood the totality of the presuppositions of a given science : more precisely, both philosophical and scientific presuppositions—that is, categories, postulates, and premises as conditions—and “existential” presuppositions. By “methodology” is understood the intellectual-emotional structure of a given science—that is, its categories, postulates, and premises as characteristics, as well as its concepts, methods, and techniques. Further, I advocate understanding a given science through a study of its approach and of its methodology. Finally, I submit that the best understanding of either of the two is impossible without the study of the other. More specifically, I advocate the consideration of a particular science as a given, and the interpretation of its intellectual structure or methodology ; and then the study of its presuppositions or underlying approach.

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References found in this work

An Essay on Man.Ernst Cassirer - 1945 - Philosophical Review 54 (5):509-510.
Language and Myth.Ernest Cassirer - 1947 - Philosophical Review 56:335.
Sociological analysis of cognitive norms.Thelma Z. Lavine - 1942 - Journal of Philosophy 39 (13):342-356.

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