Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Johan Mouton © February 2006. Comparing science and ordinary knowledge Ordinary KnowledgeScientific Knowledge Personal authorityCollective, accumulated.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Johan Mouton © February 2006. Comparing science and ordinary knowledge Ordinary KnowledgeScientific Knowledge Personal authorityCollective, accumulated."— Presentation transcript:

1 Johan Mouton © February 2006

2 Comparing science and ordinary knowledge Ordinary KnowledgeScientific Knowledge Personal authorityCollective, accumulated experience of the scientific community Unsystematic/ haphazard Systematic and methodical inquiry Secondary sourcesPrimary evidence Science: The skeptical attitude

3 The epistemic imperative  Regulative ideal – truthful knowledge (Episteme vs doxa)  The imperative – morally binding character / evidence in the way in which science is organised  Truth a representation and construction  “Levels” of truth: Truth as plausible explanation / truth as goodness of fit models / truth as accurate descriptions  Truth as an absolute notion vs validity as a probabilistic notion: degrees of validity / validity as the “best approximation of the truth”  Ontological, Sociological and methodological constraints on the attainment of truthful knowledge

4 The notion of rationality  Science is about making knowledge claims  Rationality = providing good reasons for accepting or rejecting evidence in support of knowledge claims  Rationality is NOT about providing CONCLUSIVE evidence  Rational assessments of knowledge claims is based on “objective evidence”

5 The notion of objectivity  What kind of evidence do we require to make rational/reasonable judgements about the available evidence?  Different notions of “ objectivity ” : positivist vs realist notions  Positivism: objective as a property of the researcher (Research – person)  Realism: objective as a property of the research process /procedures (process)

6 Truth, rationality and objectivity Scientific knowledge consists of statements (knowledge claims) which are better or worse approximations of social reality (MORE OR LESS TRUTHFUL); which are accepted by the scientific community after having scrutinized these (RATINALITY) on the basis of the best available evidence obtained through the application of rigorous methods and techniques (OBJECTIVITY)

7 Knowledge interests  The distinction between (social) scientific and ordinary knowledge  Corrollary: Knowledge is produced within different “worlds” and these different forms of knowledge are driven by different “knowledge interests” ……………..The 3-worlds framework

8 The three world’s framework and different forms of knowledge  World 1: World of everyday life The world of ordinary people Consists of multiple worlds Knowledge – pragmatic interest in coping  World 2: World of science The world of science and scientific research The epistemic imperative – the search for truthful knowledge  World 3: World of meta-science Reflections on the nature of science Critical interest in improving scientific practice

9 Positivism WORLD 3: WORLD OF METASCIENCE Realism Critical theory KuhnPost-modernism Phenomenology WORLD 2: WORLD OF SCIENCE WORLD 1: EVERYDAY LIFE Lay theories/ first-order constructs/ indigenous and local knowledges Grand theories (Functionalism / Neo-Marxism Systems theory / Semiotics/Structuralism) Middle level theories/ models (Theories of innovation/ Organisational development) Methodological Paradigms Quantitative research Qualitative research Participatory action research THE RESEARCH PROCESS

10 The multi-dimensionality of scientific research Scientist/ Researcher (Sociological) Valid/ Truthful knowledge (Epistemological) Research process: Design and methodology Phenomenon/ Object In World 1 (Ontological

11 Epistemological dimension  The search for truthful/credible knowledge  A regulative ideal that is constrained by: Sociological factors Ontological factors Methodological factors  “ Validity ” as the “ best approximation to the truth ”

12 Methodological Dimension  The derivation: meta + hodos  Levels of methodological dimension Methodological paradigms Methods Techniques and procedures  The qualitative/quantitative debate

13 Sociological Dimension  Scientific communities/invisible colleges/paradigms/epistemic cultures Stratification (gender/race/age) Accumulative advantage (Matthew effect)  Social rules and conventions/peer review/quality control  Self-organizing system: self-correcting system/ The old contract (Republic of science ideal) The new contract (Accountability)

14 Ontological Dimension  Different ontological positions: realism vs constructivism  The “ furniture of the social world ” Individuals Actions and events Interviews Organizations and institutions Collectives Social and cultural objects


Download ppt "Johan Mouton © February 2006. Comparing science and ordinary knowledge Ordinary KnowledgeScientific Knowledge Personal authorityCollective, accumulated."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google