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?
- Hollis, M. (1994) The Philosophy of Social Science : an introduction. Cambridge : Cambridge University
Press. Ch 1 and 2
- Webb, K. (1995) An introduction to problems in the philosophy of social sciences, London:
Pinter.
- Epistomology: http://www.ship.edu/%7Ecgboeree/epist.html
- What is philosophy? A Tour: http://www.onu.edu/a+s/philosophy/philos.html
Rationalism -v- empiricism
- M Hollis The Philosophy of Social
Science, Ch 3
- von
Wright, G. H. (1957), The Logical Problem of Induction, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, Ch 4
- Karl Popper (1999) The Logic of
Scientific Discovery, London, Routledge
- Elster, J. (1989) Nuts and Bolts for
the Social Sciences, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Benton, T. (2001) The Philosophy of
Social Science, Ch 1&2
- Theory of
Knowledge: http://www.philosophyonline.co.uk/tok/tokhome.htm
- Rationalism
and Empiricism: http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/Philosophy/UG/Studyguide/rat&emp.html
Constructivism -v- Realism
- Outhwaite, W. (1987) New Philosophies
of Social Science – Realism, Hermeneutics and Critical Theory. Macmilllan
Education.
- T Benton (2001) The Philosophy of
Social Science, Ch 7
- Constructivism: http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~mryder/itc_data/constructivism.html
- Epistemological
Constructivism: http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/CONSTRUC.html
- Lakatos,
I. (1970) ‘Falsification and the Methodology of Scientific Research
Programmes’ In I. Lakatos and A.
Musgrave (eds.) Criticism and the
Growth of Knowledge, Cambridge University Press.
- Berger,
P. L. (1984) The Social Construction of Reality : a treatise in the
sociology of knowledg.
Harmondsworth : Penguin.
Positivism -v- Pragmatism
- Goodman,
R. B. (1995) Pragmatism – A
contemporary reader London: Routledge
- Giddens,
A. (ed.) (1974) Positivism and Sociology. London : Heinemann Educational
- Pragmatism
archive: http://www.pragmatism.org/
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
- Pleasants, N. (1999) Wittgenstein and
the idea of a critical social theory : a critique of Gidden. London:
Routledge.
- Richard Rorty (1989) 'The Contingency
of Language' in Contingency, irony
and solidarity, New York: Cambridge University Press.
- C.
Taylor (1971) ‘Interpretation and the Sciences of Man’, Review of Metaphysics, 25: 3-51.
(Also published in C. Taylor (1985) Philosophy
and the Human Sciences: Philosophical Papers 2, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press: Ch 1.)
- A
Giddens, New Rules of Sociological Method, Ch 1
- Ayer,
A.J. Language, Truth, and Logic. New York, Dover, 1952.
- Winch,
P (1958) The Idea of a Social Science and its Relation to Philosophy,
London: RKP
Part 2: Philosophical approaches
Institutionalism and new institutionalism
- Williamson
(1996) The Mechanisms of Governance,
Oxford: Oxford University Press
- H
Simon (1991) ‘Organizations and markets’ Journal of Economic Perspectives, 5: 25-44
- W
Powell (ed.) (1991) New
institutionalism in organizational analysis, Chicago: University of
Chicago Press
Ethics and organizational control
- MacIntyre,
A (1999) A Short History of Ethics,
London: Routledge: Ch.s 2-3
- Critchley,
S (1999) The Ethics of
Deconstruction, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
- Parker,
M (2003) ‘Ethics, Politics and Organizing’, Organization, 10 (2): 187-203
Aesthetic views of organization
- Ridley,
A and Neil, A (eds) (2002) Arguing about Art: Contemporary
Philosophical Debates, London: Routledge
- Guillen,
M (1997) 'Scientific management's lost aesthetic: Architecture,
organization, and the Taylorized beauty of the mechanical'. Administrative Science Quarterly
42/4: 682-715
- Taylor,
S (2000) 'Aesthetic knowledge in academia: Capitalist pigs at the academy
of management' Journal of Management
Inquiry 9/3: 304-328
- Linstead,
S and Hopfl, H (2000) The Aesthetics
of Organization, London: Sage
Stakeholder theory
- Thomas
Donaldson; Lee E. Preston (1995) ‘The stakeholder theory of the
corporation: concepts, evidence, and implications’, Academy of Management Review, 20 (1): 65-91
- Freeman,
E, Liedtka, J ‘Stakeholder Capitalism and the Value Chain’, European Management Journal, 15
(3): 286-296
- M
Parker (ed.) (1998) Ethics and
Organizations, London: Sage
- Werhane,
P, Freeman, E (1999) ‘Business Ethics: The State of the Art’, International Journal of Management
Reviews, March: 1-16
Classic books to which we (and many others) refer
- D
Hume (1748) An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.
- I
Kant (1781) Critique of Pure Reason
- E
Hussurl (1907) The Idea of Phenomenology
·
B Russell (1912) The Problems of Philosophy
- L
Wittgenstein (1952) Philosophical Investigations
- W
van O Quine (1953) From a Logical Point of View
- JL
Austin (1962) How to Do Things with Words.
- K
Popper (1965) Conjectures and Refutations
- C Hempel (1966) Philosophy of Natural
Science
- T.
Kuhn’s (1970) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
- J
Derrida (1972) Words and Things
- P
Feyerabend (1975) Against Methode
- B
van Fraassen (1980) The Scientific Image