A new form of ‘interdisciplinarity’ may be emerging but has so far failed to devote equal demands on the natural sciences, as well as on the social sciences. Will Davies responds to the calls for a social science shake-up by questioning the status of the social sciences in 2014 as something other than mere understudies to the natural sciences. The shared terrain of the two, he argues, seems to rest on various acts of forgetting on the part of the social sciences, but no acts of learning on the part of the natural sciences
The paper investigates what is meant by "good science" and "bad science" and how these differ as bet...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If we want to empower and re-enchant social scientific research, we need to do three things. First, ...
The contribution of the field of science and technology studies (STS) to main stream sociology has s...
Managing Editor Sierra Williams spoke to Professor Nicholas A. Christakis ahead of next week’s LSE e...
This paper looks at the centrality of action in social disciplines and examines the implications of ...
Social science has for the most part lost its ambition to be ‘science’, as shown in the recent chang...
There is ferment in the social sciences. After years of sustained effort to build a science of socie...
Much less is known about the development of the social sciences as a complete discipline group than ...
A particular scientific world view has become dominant, influential and successful in modern science...
The labour market is filled with social science graduates and postgraduates shaping the evolution of...
The social sciences today, Lee McIntyre argues, are in the same state in which the natural sciences ...
Social scientists have long been concerned with inequality, yet the focus has often been on its theo...
Even if there ever existed a time when it could be argued that ‘interdisciplinary’ research was unne...
Social sciences are trying to impose themselves as established ones. For example, it’s used to be pr...
The paper investigates what is meant by "good science" and "bad science" and how these differ as bet...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If we want to empower and re-enchant social scientific research, we need to do three things. First, ...
The contribution of the field of science and technology studies (STS) to main stream sociology has s...
Managing Editor Sierra Williams spoke to Professor Nicholas A. Christakis ahead of next week’s LSE e...
This paper looks at the centrality of action in social disciplines and examines the implications of ...
Social science has for the most part lost its ambition to be ‘science’, as shown in the recent chang...
There is ferment in the social sciences. After years of sustained effort to build a science of socie...
Much less is known about the development of the social sciences as a complete discipline group than ...
A particular scientific world view has become dominant, influential and successful in modern science...
The labour market is filled with social science graduates and postgraduates shaping the evolution of...
The social sciences today, Lee McIntyre argues, are in the same state in which the natural sciences ...
Social scientists have long been concerned with inequality, yet the focus has often been on its theo...
Even if there ever existed a time when it could be argued that ‘interdisciplinary’ research was unne...
Social sciences are trying to impose themselves as established ones. For example, it’s used to be pr...
The paper investigates what is meant by "good science" and "bad science" and how these differ as bet...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If we want to empower and re-enchant social scientific research, we need to do three things. First, ...