Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Explanation and understanding
- 2 Theory, experiment and the metaphysics of Laplace
- 3 Explanation and understanding in the social sciences
- 4 Agents and generative social mechanisms
- 5 Social science and history
- 6 Markets as social mechanisms
- Appendix A The limits of multiple regression
- Appendix B Comparison, Mill's methods and narrative
- Appendix C Rational choice theory and historical sociology
- Appendix D The neo-classical model
- References
- Index
Appendix B - Comparison, Mill's methods and narrative
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Explanation and understanding
- 2 Theory, experiment and the metaphysics of Laplace
- 3 Explanation and understanding in the social sciences
- 4 Agents and generative social mechanisms
- 5 Social science and history
- 6 Markets as social mechanisms
- Appendix A The limits of multiple regression
- Appendix B Comparison, Mill's methods and narrative
- Appendix C Rational choice theory and historical sociology
- Appendix D The neo-classical model
- References
- Index
Summary
Historical sociology typically employs comparison as a research strategy. In what follows we concentrate on the idea of comparison and try to get clear on its use – and misuse. Inspired by Theda Skocpol's influential States and Social Revolutions (1979), recent sophisticated discussions argue that the methods codified by John Stuart Mill are appropriate techniques toward advancing a more “scientific” approach to comparative analysis. Finally, as part of this, we look at the idea of “narrative” as a mode of explanatory sociology. The issues are at the heart of a lively recent debate between Skocpol and William Sewell. While the two writers seem often to be talking past one another, once the key assumptions and confusions are clarified, a resolution is readily available.
We can develop these issues by considering the ideas put forward by James Mahoney (1999) regarding “Nominal, Ordinal, and Narrative Appraisal in Macrocausal Analysis,” the title of his important essay. Mahoney is interested in identifying explanatory generalizations and offers that the three strategies identified in the title of his essay can be, and are, employed jointly by researchers, despite the view often taken that the work uses only one strategy. On his view, “each of these three different strategies represents a different technique that can be used for assessing the same causal relationship.” Thus States and Social Revolutions is wrongly taken to employ one basic strategy, “nominal appraisal.” Mahoney argues that, indeed, Skocpol employs successfully all three.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Realist Philosophy of Social ScienceExplanation and Understanding, pp. 157 - 170Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006