Critical Theory and MethodologySAGE Publications, 1994 M06 29 - 381 pages Critical Theory traces its roots from Marxism, through the renowned Frankfurt School, to a wide array of national and cultural traditions. Raymond Morrow's book traces the history and outlines the major tenets of critical theory for an undergraduate audience. He exemplifies the theory through an analysis of two leading social theorists: J[um]urgen Habermas and Anthony Giddens. Unique to this volume is the emphasis on the link between Critical Theory and empirical research and social science methodology, often thought to be incompatible. |
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Page 43
... phenomena . Such explanations seek to answer " why " and " how " questions ... human experience ( ultimately , sense - data ) . An empirical science is ... human reason , rather than objective facts ( the object ) to justify the validity ...
... phenomena . Such explanations seek to answer " why " and " how " questions ... human experience ( ultimately , sense - data ) . An empirical science is ... human reason , rather than objective facts ( the object ) to justify the validity ...
Page 139
... phenomena transcendental because they could not be observed directly , as in the case of empirical phenomena ... human sciences to embrace mathematical , physical , and biological structures ( Piaget 1970 ) . 5. We also can take our point of ...
... phenomena transcendental because they could not be observed directly , as in the case of empirical phenomena ... human sciences to embrace mathematical , physical , and biological structures ( Piaget 1970 ) . 5. We also can take our point of ...
Page 158
... phenomena , as opposed to the generalizations about deeper causal mechanisms and structural rules that operate ... human beings ] make history , but not in circumstances of their own choosing ' " ( Gid- dens 1984 , p . xxi ) . But both ...
... phenomena , as opposed to the generalizations about deeper causal mechanisms and structural rules that operate ... human beings ] make history , but not in circumstances of their own choosing ' " ( Gid- dens 1984 , p . xxi ) . But both ...
Contents
What Is Critical Theory? | 3 |
Approaching Methodology | 37 |
The SubjectivistObjectivist Polarization | 53 |
Copyright | |
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Critical Theory and Methodology Raymond A. Morrow,Raymond Allen Morrow,David D. Brown Limited preview - 1994 |
Common terms and phrases
action Adorno analysis analytic analytical Marxism Anthony Giddens approach argued aspects associated assumptions basic basis Bourdieu Cambridge causal central claims communication conception concerned contemporary critical theory context critical realism critical research critical theory critique crucial debates defined dialectic discourse distinction domination economic edited empiricism empiricist epistemological explanation focus formal Foucault Frankfurt School fundamental Giddens's Habermas and Giddens Habermas's hermeneutics historical materialism Horkheimer human sciences ideology implications inquiry interpretive involved issues Jürgen Habermas knowledge linguistic linked logic London Marx Marxist mediational metatheory methodology methods natural sciences normative notion perspective phenomenology philosophy political positivism positivist postempiricist Postmodernism postmodernist poststructuralism practice problematic problems qualitative quantitative questions rational reality reconstruction reference reflexive relations reproduction research program Routledge scientific sense social psychology social research social science social theory sociology specific strategies structuralist symbolic interactionism theme theoretical theorists tion tive tradition transformation University Press Western Marxism York