M.Res Philosophy of Social Science: Reading List

Dr Robin Holt – r.holt@mmu.ac.uk

Dr Bruce Edmonds – b.edmonds@mmu.ac.uk

 

The philosophy of social science programme investigates the claims to truth, fact and meaning made by scientists and social scientists. Each week the ideas are introduced in the form of a debate, allowing students to explore different questions of meaning from within the dialogues that have posed them. Whilst historical material will be used, each debate will be brought into the confines of current social science concerns. The aim of the course is to provoke in students a critical awareness of any claims to knowledge made. As part of each session, the potential implications for conducting research in management will be introduced and discussed; both in terms of the bases that research approaches might adopt along with the political and ethical implications of specific methodologies.   

Core reading:

Please read:

·         Chalmers, A. F. (1999) What is this thing called science? Open University Press.

And one of the following (or at least relevant chunks of it):

·         Little, D. (1991) Varieties of Social Explanation. Westview Press,

·         Blaikie, N. (1993) Approaches to Social Enquiry. Polity Press.

Part 1: Philosophical positions

What is philosophy?

Rationalism -v-  empiricism


Constructivism -v- Realism

Positivism -v- Pragmatism

Phenomenology and post-modernism

·         Richard Rorty (1991) 'Postmodern Bourgeois Liberalism' in Objectivity, relativism and truth, New York: Cambridge University Press.

·         John Hassard (1993) 'Postmodernism and Organizational Analysis: an Overview' in J Hasard and M Parker Ed.s Postmodernism and Organizations, London: Sage

·         B Latour (1999) ‘ Do you believe in reality?’ in Pandora’s Hope, Harvard: Harvard University Press

·         T Benton (2001) The Philosophy of Social Science, Ch 9

·         T Eagleton (1996) The Illusions of Postmodernism, London: Routledge

The Linguistic Turn

Part 2: Philosophical approaches

Institutionalism and new institutionalism

Ethics and organizational control

Aesthetic views of organization

Stakeholder theory

Classic books to which we (and many others) refer

·         B Russell (1912) The Problems of Philosophy