If doctors find sociological methods unreliable, the results unsound, and the approach irrelevant, this is due to the essential differences between the procedures and interests of the exact and the social sciences. When sociologists raise doubts concerning the one-sidedness of the medical approach, its exaggerated professionalism, lack of concern for the social context of cure, those are latent requirements which do not match the current paradigm of medical knowledge. It is assumed here that the difference between experimental method and the interpretive procedures of sociology has a basic character and cannot be overcome by the methodological refinement of the latter. Understanding sociological knowledge must be based only against a backgr...
One of the dramatic developments in contemporary sociology has been the emergence of the sociology o...
With some notable exceptions, such as Davis (1996), Elston (1994) and Gabe and Bury (1996), few writ...
Contains fulltext : 71187.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: Res...
This thesis investigates theoretical and empirical developments in thesociology of medical knowledge...
Objective. To reveal the peculiarities of medical sociology introducing the application of social th...
M.A.Modern scientific medicine, in both its clinical method and its scientific practice, assumes a v...
This paper, first presented in 1951, promotes the emergence of a sociology of medicine
One of the distinguishing features of the discipline of sociology is its concern with met hods and m...
A scientific research uses the methods and techniques which contribute to the perception of a partic...
The book contains an extensive set of chapters which explain why aresearch student’s thesis has used...
The production and reception of scientific papers in the academic-industrial complex have been negle...
As a framework for presenting ideas on developing ways to make sociology more applicable, we focus o...
British medical sociology emerged in the shadow of a publicly-funded National Health Service, and th...
A rapid development of studies of sociologists of medicine on the one hand and the traditional domi...
This thesis explores the historical roots of scientific medicine in an effort to highlight the lack ...
One of the dramatic developments in contemporary sociology has been the emergence of the sociology o...
With some notable exceptions, such as Davis (1996), Elston (1994) and Gabe and Bury (1996), few writ...
Contains fulltext : 71187.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: Res...
This thesis investigates theoretical and empirical developments in thesociology of medical knowledge...
Objective. To reveal the peculiarities of medical sociology introducing the application of social th...
M.A.Modern scientific medicine, in both its clinical method and its scientific practice, assumes a v...
This paper, first presented in 1951, promotes the emergence of a sociology of medicine
One of the distinguishing features of the discipline of sociology is its concern with met hods and m...
A scientific research uses the methods and techniques which contribute to the perception of a partic...
The book contains an extensive set of chapters which explain why aresearch student’s thesis has used...
The production and reception of scientific papers in the academic-industrial complex have been negle...
As a framework for presenting ideas on developing ways to make sociology more applicable, we focus o...
British medical sociology emerged in the shadow of a publicly-funded National Health Service, and th...
A rapid development of studies of sociologists of medicine on the one hand and the traditional domi...
This thesis explores the historical roots of scientific medicine in an effort to highlight the lack ...
One of the dramatic developments in contemporary sociology has been the emergence of the sociology o...
With some notable exceptions, such as Davis (1996), Elston (1994) and Gabe and Bury (1996), few writ...
Contains fulltext : 71187.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: Res...