Knowing the Social World: Paradigms and Practices
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Transcript Knowing the Social World: Paradigms and Practices
VALUES, VALIDITY AND
IDEAL TYPES: WEBER
Gurminder K Bhambra
23rd October, 2013
INTRODUCTION TO WEBER
Weber’s methodological writings set out the
principles of an interpretive sociology
What is distinctive about social science?
What is the relation between distinct social sciences?
Interpretive social science is based upon
understanding the motives of individuals.
Understanding, not law-like generalisations, is
the ultimate aim of sociology as an interpretive
science.
Difference between natural and social sciences.
THE ROLE OF VALUES
Actors attribute meaning to the world; they also attribute it
significance and value
Social inquirers also act in the world and endow it with
values and meaning.
This is an issue of values for social scientists which is
additional to the issue of values for the scientist
A neutral attitude is an attitude within the world you’re
studying
How are those values prevented from being ‘biases’ in inquiry?
Or to take a neutral attitude is to face ‘alienation’
Difficulty of separating out values
METHODOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS
Weber: we need a methodology of the social sciences
that recognises that the problems we study are not
themselves value-neutral.
Cultural variation in forms of behaviour means that the
nature of what is perceived to be a problem will vary, and
what sociologists are called upon to consider will be
different.
In contrast, the problems that are studied in science
are self-generated within the science.
In the social sciences what are considered problems
for study are produced in part externally to social
scientists – they are socially derived, they are not
endogenous to social science.
OBJECTIVITY IN SOCIAL INQUIRY
Three core problems:
How do we have methodological rigour in the social
sciences given the relation to values?
What is the role of generalisations (given that they
are part of methodological rigour in science as
normally understood) in a social inquiry oriented to
particulars?
How are sociological constructs related to actors’
meanings?
The methodology of ideal types is the attempt to
solve these problems.
IDEAL TYPES
There are two forms of ‘types’
Pure types – not empirical category, reflection on the
nature of action, it’s a logical type from thinking
about the characteristics of action itself
Ideal types – all empirical instances to which the
type is implied for purposes of interpretation deviate
from the pure type
Ideal types in action in relation to a valuerelevant question.
Value-relevant question: Why did capitalism arise in
Europe?
This requires the construction of an ideal-type: what
do we mean by capitalism?