This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Columbia University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
4. Moral/Analytic Dilemmas Posed by the Intersection of Feminism and Social Science
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Contributors IX
- Preface XIII
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Disciplinary Critiques
- 1. Morality And The Social Sciences: A Durable Tension 21
- 2. Do the Social Sciences Have an Adequate Theory of Moral Development? 33
- 3. Humanism as Nihilism: The Bracketing of Truth and Seriousness in American Cultural Anthropology 52
- 4. Moral/Analytic Dilemmas Posed by the Intersection of Feminism and Social Science 76
- 5. Want Formation, Morality, and Some Interpretive Aspects of Economic Inquiry 96
- 6. History: Ethics, Science, and Fiction 125
-
Part II. Issues of Foundation
- 7. Method and Morality 155
- 8. Withering Norms: Deconstructing the Foundation of the Social Sciences 177
- 9. Beyond Interpretation: Human Agency and the Slovenly Wilderness 195
- 10. An Interactional Morality of Everyday Life 218
- 11. Interpretive Social Science vs. Hermeneuticism 251
-
Part III. Social Applications and Social Policy
- 12. Reflections on the Form and Content of Social Science: Toward a Consciously Political and Moral Social Science 273
- 13. Beyond Policy Science: The Social Sciences as Moral Sciences 297
- 14. Believing in Social Science: The Ethics and Epistemology of Public Opinion Research 320
- 15. Moral Commitment, Privatism, and Activism: Notes on a Research Program 343
- 16. The Ethical Aims of Social Inquiry 360
- Index 383
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- Contributors IX
- Preface XIII
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Disciplinary Critiques
- 1. Morality And The Social Sciences: A Durable Tension 21
- 2. Do the Social Sciences Have an Adequate Theory of Moral Development? 33
- 3. Humanism as Nihilism: The Bracketing of Truth and Seriousness in American Cultural Anthropology 52
- 4. Moral/Analytic Dilemmas Posed by the Intersection of Feminism and Social Science 76
- 5. Want Formation, Morality, and Some Interpretive Aspects of Economic Inquiry 96
- 6. History: Ethics, Science, and Fiction 125
-
Part II. Issues of Foundation
- 7. Method and Morality 155
- 8. Withering Norms: Deconstructing the Foundation of the Social Sciences 177
- 9. Beyond Interpretation: Human Agency and the Slovenly Wilderness 195
- 10. An Interactional Morality of Everyday Life 218
- 11. Interpretive Social Science vs. Hermeneuticism 251
-
Part III. Social Applications and Social Policy
- 12. Reflections on the Form and Content of Social Science: Toward a Consciously Political and Moral Social Science 273
- 13. Beyond Policy Science: The Social Sciences as Moral Sciences 297
- 14. Believing in Social Science: The Ethics and Epistemology of Public Opinion Research 320
- 15. Moral Commitment, Privatism, and Activism: Notes on a Research Program 343
- 16. The Ethical Aims of Social Inquiry 360
- Index 383