
Science in the Making
Description
This Brief draws on the work of French sociologist Jean-Michel Berthelot to propose a version of explanatory pluralism. It distinguishes six explanatory or intelligibility schemes found in modern social sciences: actantial, functional, hermeneutic, structural, dialectic, and causal schemes. The Brief deals with each explanatory scheme in a separate chapter, each being structured into two parts: three examples of scholarly works applying a given scheme and discussion of the characteristics of the given scheme. The last chapter proposes a synthesis.
More details
Person
Louis M. Imbeau is Professor Emeritus at Université Laval, Québec (Canada). Professor Imbeau's work touches on a wide range of issues in the field of political science, including international development aid, fiscal policy for Canadian provinces, economic policy for public finance, comparative analysis of constitutions, systematic analysis of constitutions, systematic analysis of political discourse, and parliamentary control of public finances. He received the Stein Rokkan Prize from the International Science Council, UNESCO, and the European Consortium for Political Research for his work on the factors that influence allocation of international aid to developing countries. A prolific researcher, he has authored many scholarly publications and was a visiting professor at universities in France, Italy, the U.S., and Turkey.
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The Actantial Schema: Action as the basis for explanation.- Chapter 3: The Functional Schema: Explaining through consequences.- Chapter 4: The Hermeneutic Schema: Explaining through interpretation.- Chapter 5: The Structural Schema: The social context as an explanation.- Chapter 6: The Dialectical Schema: Explaining by means of contradiction.- Chapter 7: The Causal Schema: The 'scientific' approach.- Chapter 8: The role of explanatory schemas in the inference process.- Chapter 9: Conclusion: From science in the making to ready-made science.