Mechanisms and Causality in Sociology

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Epistemology: when the knower is the known, social constructionism and realism.
Advertisements

Theoretical Issues: Structure and Agency
Whats Wrong With Variable Analysis? Nick Crossley.
Agent-Structure Problems May 28, Nature of Problem The character of the agent-structure problem has to do with several questions: At what level.
Mechanisms and Explanation Phyllis McKay and Jon Williamson University of Kent.
Ideal-types of Health Promotion Evaluation Practice Louise Potvin, PhD Université de Montréal III Saminario Brasileiro de Efetivivade da Promoçao da Saude.
Philosophy of Science The last fifty years. Divergence Questioning methods, validity, facts Realism/Antirealism Incommensurability The emergence of relativism.
Stuart Glennan Butler University.  The generalist view: Particular events are causally related because they fall under general laws  The singularist.
Understanding the Research Process
Social Mechanisms. What Social Sciences Can Learn From Natural Sciences. LORENZO CASINI Philosophy, Kent
1 From metaphysics to logical positivism The metaphysician tells us that empirical truth-conditions [for metaphysical terms] cannot be specified; if he.
Post-Positivist Perspectives on Theory Development
Weber ‘Objective Possibility and Adequate Causation in Historical Explanation’.
Theoretical Perspectives and Research Methodologies
Realism – a basic introduction Professor Bjørn Asheim, Lecture, NORSI/PING PhD course University of Agder, Kristiansand, 25th October 2012.
Reflecting on identity: practice what you preach? Chris Dalton PhD Experience Conference University of Hull, February.
A brief introduction to realist synthesis
April 14, Argues liberal analysis cannot claim to present an alternative theory of international politics to realism or institutionalism by merely:
Chapter 4 Understanding research philosophies and approaches
Mechanisms versus Difference-Making Examples from genetics and molecular biology Gry Oftedal 2009 University of Oslo.
Margaret Farren (Higher Education) Darragh Power (Training) Fiona Williams (Post-primary) Fionnbarra Hallissey (Further Education) Web of Betweeness: constructing.
Function and Organization: Comparing the mechanisms of protein synthesis and natural selection Phyllis Illari and Jon Williamson University of Kent.
Mechanisms and the Metaphysics of Causation Peter Fazekas Peter Fazekas School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, The University of Edinburgh.
On the causal interpretation of statistical models in social research Alessio Moneta & Federica Russo.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORIES: CONSTRUCTIVISM
Measuring variations Causality and causal modelling in the social sciences Federica Russo Philosophy, Louvain & Kent.
The Relational ‘We’ in Personal Morphogenesis Beth Weaver.
Requirements of a Philosophy of Money and Finance John Smithin York University.
Causality and causal inference 4 th session, reading group in qualitative methods 11/
Pitt-London Workshop in Philosophy of Biology and Neuroscience A meeting held at Birkbeck College London under the auspices of The London Consortium, a.
Explanatory mechanisms: The contribution of systems thinking and critical realism Professor John Mingers Kent Business School University.
CONCEPT, THEORY, CASE Deciphering the Differences 1.
The contrasting environments that early career academics experience in their departmental teaching and on programmes of initial professional development.
Chapter Three: The Use of Theory
CHAPTER 2 Foundations and Definitions of Theory Building.
Contesting Sociology as a Science. Interpretivism  Interpretivists argue that society cannot be studied in the same way as objects in natural science.
Designing Social Inquiry Challenges to Positivism Jaechun Kim.
Sociology 323 Economy & Society Class 2 – What is an Economy?
Usual Advice # 1  Avoid certain kinds of “argument”  Arksey & Harris ( 2007) ch. 5: avoid personal rant,
The 5e Instructional Model A Constructivist Approach to Education.
A Checklist for Reasoning & Questions Using the Elements of Thought
Introduction to Ethics Lecture 7 Mackie & Moral Skepticism
What is theory? What is IR?  What is theory Etymology Definition: A supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based.
1 URBDP 591 A Analysis, Interpretation, and Synthesis -Assumptions of Progressive Synthesis -Principles of Progressive Synthesis -Components and Methods.
Some Issues to Consider in thinking about Causes and Explanations.
Constructivism: The Social Construction of International Politics POL 3080 Approaches to IR.
My level of thinking and learning is… TASK: Prestructural I’m not sure about … Unistructural I have one relevant idea about … Multistructural I have several.
International Relations Theory A New Introduction Chapter 10 Conclusion and Perspectives.
Principles, Practices and Dynamics of Research Management LECTURE-3 Le Problematique: Understanding Research Problem Kazi Nurmohammad Hossainul Haque Senior.
I NTERPRETATION & R EALISM Gurminder K Bhambra 16 th October, 2013.
Realism in Marketing Research: A Third Way Ontological and Epistemological Approach Presentation to International Marketing and Services Management Academic.
Critical Realism and Realist Synthesis Sam Porter School of Nursing and Midwifery March 2016.
What’s all this fuss about mechanisms? Phyllis McKay University of Kent.
Using critical realism to think about business and management research John Kitching Manchester Metropolitan University 30 March, 2016.
Article : Competing Paradigms in Qualitative Research
More About Research and Beliefs Interpretive Frameworks.
Introducing Critical Religious Education Andrew Wright Professor of Religious and Theological Education UCL Institute of Education London School of Theology.
WHAT MODELS DO THAT THEORIES CAN’T Lilia Gurova Department of Cognitive Science and Psychology New Bulgarian University.
‘May you live in interesting times’. IRPG841/L1 Introducing IR Theory: Concepts, Methods and Approaches the nature and scope of IR the role of theory.
INF th of January 2005.
Implications of Giaquinto’s epistemology of visual thinking to the teaching and learning of fractions Ph.D. student: Leonardo Barichello Supervisors: Dr.
AN INTRODUCTION TO PARAGRAPHING
The research philosophy
A template for describing behaviour change theories
David Hume and Causation
Philosophy of the social sciences Autumn 2017
Knowledge Basis for Design Steve Frezza, Ph. D., C.S.D.P.
The research philosophy
Introduction to Research Methodology
Quality in statistics and relation to the media
Presentation transcript:

Mechanisms and Causality in Sociology Rubén D. Flores Sandoval Mechanisms and Causality in the Sciences, University of Kent, 2009

Mechanisms and Causality Growing attention to mechanisms within the philosophy of social science and social theory (Gross 2009) “Knowledge is the knowledge of causes” (Russo 2009) Social mechanisms – relevant for social policy (Weber 2007; Hunting Causes) What are social mechanisms? Are they different from mechanisms in the natural sciences? How far can they take us? 2

Social Mechanisms Various conceptions have been suggested: “Mechanisms as Observable processes that do not require the posting of motives” “Mechanisms as Lower-Order Social Processes” “Mechanisms as Trigerable Causal Powers” “Mechanisms as Transformative Events” Gross 2009: 360-361 3

A provisional definition “A social mechanism is a more or less general sequence of set of social events or processes (…) by which—in certain circumstances—some cause X tends to bring about some effect Y in the realm of human social relations.” (Gross 2009: 364) 4

However, Most conceptions put forth so far work with an unsatisfactory conception of social action (Gross 2009): As an alternative to current models, Neil Gross has put forth a model of social mechanisms based on American Pragmatism philosophy and social theory: Human beings as ‘problem solvers’ Human Action: Habit and Creativity Social Action as Social Practice 5

Gross’s model of SM Actors Problem Situations Habitus Responses A-P-H-R chains…are systems and power somehow missing from the picture? 6

My aims here I would like to 1) extend one of Gross’s points: discussion about social mechanisms needs to take social theory seriously. And 2) argue that it is possible to think of social mechanisms in terms of entities and activities (Machamer, Darden and Craver 2000). 7

Thinking about social entities and activities… How to think of entities and activities within the social world? (cf. debates around the relation between mechanisms in the natural sciences and the social sciences. See Cassini, this conference) Is human agency comparable to what, say, aspirin does? What other forms of activities are out there in society? How do human agency differs from the causal powers of emergent social entities (e.g. capitalism)? 8

Social ontology What kind of entities and activities populate the social world? Proposition: any satisfactory account of social mechanisms ought to take social ontology seriously. Activities Entities Actors Problem Situations Habitus, Responses Lifeworld, Social Action Systems, Structures, Figurations 9

Social Theory Pragmatism Communicative Action Functionalism System Theory Critical Realism Competing conceptions of entities and activities? Social theory has occupied itself for a while about questions of social ontology, so it is in a good position to inform us about the entities and activities that constitute the social world. 10

How to think about society? Archer: Structures/Agents (Analytical Dualism) Giddens: Structure/ Agency Habermas: Lifeworld/System Luhmann: System/Environment Different accounts of E&A may have different implications for our understanding of SM 11

Social Ontology (1): Social Action Actors Habitus Reflexivity Agency Lifeworld How to characterise entities and activities in the realm of social action? 12

Social Ontology (2): Systems Social things Lifeworld Structures Figurations Systems How to characterise entities and activities in the realm of emergent social entities? 13

When assessing causality, mechanisms are only part of the story… 2. Precision 3. Breadth 1. Specification Block 1 6. Parsimony 4. Boundedness 5. Strenght 7. Differentiation 9. Independence 8. Priority 10. Contingency 11. Mechanism 12. Coherence 15. Innovation 13. Intelligibility 14. Relevance 16. Comparison Criteria for Assesing Causal Propositions (Gerring 2005) 14

Some open questions What is the reach, and what the limitations, of social mechanisms in explaining the social world (cf. Abbott 2004)? Are there problems that are not amenable to a mechanistic explanation? What about social policy? Can mechanisms guide us to elucidate questions of ontology? 15

Summary (1) Research on social mechanisms needs to take social ontology (and thus social theory) seriously. What entities and activities constitute the social world? Stressing the importance of social ontology does not amount to asserting a split between natural and social mechanisms (cf. Casini) MDC 2000 offers a possibility for a unifying conception of social and natural mechanisms. 16

Summary (2) There is need for more dialogue between social theory and the philosophy of science. Properly understood, social mechanisms can illuminate questions of causality within sociology. Causality is important, but it is not the only task of social science: Description is also important (Abbott 1998); even when making causal claims, mechanisms are only part of the story (Gerring 2005) What are the limitations of SM in explaining society? 17

THANK YOU Comments & Questions rdfloresss@gmail.com

References Abbott, Andrew (1998). The Causal Devolution. Sociological Methods & Research, 27(2), pp. 148-181. Abbott, Andrew (2004).Methods of Discovery. Heuristics for the Social Sciences, London: W. W. Norton & Company. Archer, Margaret. (2000). Being Human. The Problem of Agency. Cambrdige: Cambrdige University Press. Bechtel, William and Abrahamsen, Adele. (2005).Explanation: A mechanistic alternative. Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 421-441. Cartwright, N. (2007). Hunting Causes and Using Them. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. Casini, Lorenzo. (2009). Social Mechanisms: What Social Sciences can Learn from Natural Sciences. Gerring, John. (2005). Causation: A Unified Framework for the Social Sciences. Journal of Theoretical Policits, 17(2), 163-198. Gross, Neil. (2009). A Pragmatist Theory of Social Mechanisms. American Sociological Review, 74, June, pp. 358-379. Hedstrøm, Peter and Swedeberg, Richard (1996). Social Mechanisms. Acta Sociologica. 39(3), p. 281-308. Machamer, Peter (2004). Activities and causation: The metaphysics and epistemology of mechanisms, International Studies in the Philosophy of Science, 18(1), March, pp. 27-39 Machamer, Peter, Darden, Lindley and Craver, Carl F. (2000) Thinking about mechanisms. Philosophy of Science, 67(1) Russo, Federica (2009). Causality and Causal Modelling in the Social Sciences. Measuring Variation, Springer. Elder-Vass, Dave(2005). Emergence and the Realist Account of Cause. Journal of Critical Realism, 4(2). Weber, Eric (2007). Social Mechanisms, Causal Inference and the Policy Relevance of Social Science. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 37(3), p. 348.