To lay my cards on the table at the outset: I am broadly sympathetic to Frederic Schaffer’s overall campaign in favor of conceptual elucidation: “investigating the ways in which the social world is built up linguistically and the ways in which social actors deploy concepts to pursue their goals.” On numerous previous occasions I have been, like Schaffer, decidedly critical of scholarly efforts to “fix” the meaning of a concept (like the West or civilization) and then to use that scholarly reconstruction as a base from which to legislate appropriate and inappropriate practical claims using that concept—as though our task as scholars were to correct the social world rather than to explain and understand it. So Schaffer’s careful explication o...
Social science is in jeopardy, both from attempts to make it like other sciences, and from the empha...
Research in the social sciences is concerned with complex social behaviour, group dynamics and uniqu...
Although there is not much support anymore for a clear cut distinction between object-language and m...
To lay my cards on the table at the outset: I am broadly sympathetic to Frederic Schaffer’s overall ...
I am quite sympathetic to many aspects of the anthropological and ethnographic approach defended by ...
Fred Schaffer’s deceptively slim volume on interpretive methodologies and conceptual analysis is a g...
When looking for theories and methods in social science able to describe and understand changes, pra...
My talk today concerns the contribution of experimental practice to conceptual understanding in the ...
The paper introduces a new perspective on abstract concepts (e.g. “freedom”) and their associate wor...
Concepts are the central building blocks of all theoretical work. Reflecting this centrality, concep...
ABSTRACT: I argue that we can reconcile two seemingly incompatible traditions for thinking about con...
In the context of the relationship between signs and concepts, this paper tackles head on some of th...
We can now adopt a new understanding of scientific knowledge and its role in our society. The concep...
Much recent work on concepts has been inspired by and is developed within the bounds of the represen...
The paper outlines one of the most important challenges that embodied and grounded theories need to ...
Social science is in jeopardy, both from attempts to make it like other sciences, and from the empha...
Research in the social sciences is concerned with complex social behaviour, group dynamics and uniqu...
Although there is not much support anymore for a clear cut distinction between object-language and m...
To lay my cards on the table at the outset: I am broadly sympathetic to Frederic Schaffer’s overall ...
I am quite sympathetic to many aspects of the anthropological and ethnographic approach defended by ...
Fred Schaffer’s deceptively slim volume on interpretive methodologies and conceptual analysis is a g...
When looking for theories and methods in social science able to describe and understand changes, pra...
My talk today concerns the contribution of experimental practice to conceptual understanding in the ...
The paper introduces a new perspective on abstract concepts (e.g. “freedom”) and their associate wor...
Concepts are the central building blocks of all theoretical work. Reflecting this centrality, concep...
ABSTRACT: I argue that we can reconcile two seemingly incompatible traditions for thinking about con...
In the context of the relationship between signs and concepts, this paper tackles head on some of th...
We can now adopt a new understanding of scientific knowledge and its role in our society. The concep...
Much recent work on concepts has been inspired by and is developed within the bounds of the represen...
The paper outlines one of the most important challenges that embodied and grounded theories need to ...
Social science is in jeopardy, both from attempts to make it like other sciences, and from the empha...
Research in the social sciences is concerned with complex social behaviour, group dynamics and uniqu...
Although there is not much support anymore for a clear cut distinction between object-language and m...