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Could constructive empiricism be more useful than critical realism as a foundation for action research on information infrastructure development? Petter.

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Presentation on theme: "Could constructive empiricism be more useful than critical realism as a foundation for action research on information infrastructure development? Petter."— Presentation transcript:

1 Could constructive empiricism be more useful than critical realism as a foundation for action research on information infrastructure development? Petter Øgland, Department of Informatics, University of Oslo 3 rd III Workshop, 13 th -16 th October 2014

2 Plan for presentation Real world motivation (5 min.) – Problem: Difficult to test bootstrap strategy through action research – Possible solution: Use philosophy of science to make action research easier Theory: Critical realism (CR) and constructive empiricism (CE) (10 min.) – CR fits with the “trad.” way of doing IS and II action research (critical theory) – CE fits with the “modern” way of doing action research (design science) – Hypothesis: CE is more useful than CR for designing action research Experiment: Using CR and CE for designing action research (10 min.) – Testing bootstrap hypothesis in Malawian healthcare institution (CR) – Testing bootstrap hypothesis in Norwegian financial institution (CE) – Discussion: Which philosophy is most useful for improving action? Real world conclusion (5 min.) – CR turns action research into ideology, CE turns action research into science – CE should be used for designing action research on II development

3 How to test the bootstrap algorithm through real world experiments? Networks of action (Braa et al, 2004) is a way of thinking of action research in terms of portfolio management Bootstrap algorithm as monopoly strategy (Øgland, 2013) based on knowledge, skill and luck. Computer simulation studies. Difficult to succeed. Most players get thrown out of the game.

4 Action research thought of as a mixed- methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning

5 Action research thought of as a mixed- methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning INTERPRETIVISM

6 Action research thought of as a mixed- methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning NON-EMPIRICAL RESEARCH

7 Action research thought of as a mixed- methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning POSITIVISM

8 Action research thought of as a mixed- methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning CRITICAL REALISM

9 Critical realism (Bhaskar, 1975) What do we want to understand (ontology: realism) How we can understand (epistemology: discovering the truth)

10 Constructive empiricism (van Fraassen, 1980) What do we want to understand (ontology: agnosticism) How we can understand (epistemology: constructing useful models)

11 CR and CE as basis for action research Critical realism (CR) The Marxist model is (is not) a true representation of society Constructive empiricism (CE) The Marxist model is (is not) a useful representation of society

12 Example: CR-based action research for testing the bootstrap algorithm Manda and Sanner (2012) investigate the bootstrap algorithm in a Malawi healthcare institution. Diagnosis: Interviews, observations and document reviews are used for describing II development challenges. Treatment: Tool: The bootstrap algorithm is used as a “sensitising device” for analysing development practice. Evaluation: Some parts of the bootstrap algorithm easy to follow in practice, and some parts were difficult. Learning: The algorithm is a useful tool.

13 Example: CR-based action research for testing the bootstrap algorithm Diagnosis: Interviews, observations and document reviews are used for describing II development challenges. Treatment: Tool: The bootstrap algorithm is used as a “sensitising device” for analysing development practice. Evaluation: Some parts of the bootstrap algorithm easy to follow in practice, and some parts were difficult. Learning: The algorithm is a useful tool. ? ? ? ? Would this convince somebody who does not see the real world through the lens of complexity theory?

14 Example: CE-based action research for testing the bootstrap algorithm Øgland (2013) investigates the bootstrap algorithm in a Norwegian financial institution. Diagnosis: Interviews, observations and document reviews are used for developing a game model. Treatment: An operational version of the bootstrap algorithm is deduced by analysing the model. Evaluation: The bootstrap algorithm is implemented and statistical methods are used for testing the model conclusions. Learning: Need to improve algorithm.

15 Example: CE-based action research for testing the bootstrap algorithm Øgland (2013) investigates the bootstrap algorithm in a Norwegian financial institution. Diagnosis: Interviews, observations and document reviews are used for developing a game model. Treatment: An operational version of the bootstrap algorithm is deduced by analysing the model. Evaluation: The bootstrap algorithm is implemented and statistical methods are used for testing the model conclusions. Learning: Need to improve algorithm. Focus on the usefulness of the model and learn from errors

16 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology

17 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology

18 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology

19 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology

20 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology

21 Discussion: How do CR and CE compare in the two examples? CR approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is intuitively related to diagnosis Treatment cannot be falsified by experiment Theoretical learning is conditioned by agreement with ideological beliefs CE approach Diagnosis is ideologically motivated Treatment is logically deduced from diagnosis Treatment can be falsified by experiment Learning relates to theory and is independent of ideology INDOCTRINATIONSCIENCE

22 CONCLUSION: Action research thought of as a mixed-methods approach FINDING A TREATMENT Theoretical reasoning DIAGNOSIS Interviews, observations, document reviews EVALUATING THE TREATMENT Experiment and statistical reasoning CONSTRUCTIVE EMPIRICISM

23 Summary of presentation Real world motivation – Problem: Difficult to test bootstrap strategy through action research – Possible solution: Use philosophy of science to make action research easier Theory: Critical realism (CR) and constructive empiricism (CE) – CR fits with the “trad.” way of doing IS and II action research (critical theory) – CE fits with the “modern” way of doing action research (design science) – Hypothesis: CE is more useful than CR for designing action research Experiment: Implications of CR and CE for designing action research – Testing bootstrap hypothesis in Malawian healthcare institution (CR) – Testing bootstrap hypothesis in Norwegian financial institution (CE) – Discussion: Which philosophy is most useful for improving action? Real world conclusion – CR turns action research into ideology, CE turns action research into science – CE should be used for designing action research on II development


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