Official Comment Count: 1,031,578

Mixing Memory

An entrée of Cognitive Science with an occasional side of whatever the hell else I want to talk about.

Search this blog

Profile

No3.jpg Cognitive stuff from a cognitive person. If you've got any requests, drop me an email. If it takes me a while to get to it, drop me another one.

The lovely banners were created by Anton Oetll and Todd Hartman.

April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain.

iloveyoupzmyers.jpg

.

Reading Group

The Mixing Memory Reading Group is a place for experts and non-experts alike to discuss books and papers in cognitive science.

Recent Posts

Categories

Archives

Blogs For All and For None

Cognitive Science and the Like

The Lesser Sciences

Philosophy

Feminists

Politics Or Close to It

Seriously Good But I Don't Know What to Call It

Other Links

Journals

« Gender, Math, Stereotype Threat, and Testosterone | Main | Cool Visual Illusions: Audivisual Fission and Fusion, I »

"Methodological Opportunism" at Alpha Psy

Category: Philosophy
Posted on: October 28, 2006 12:40 AM, by Chris

There's a really interesting post by Alberto over at Alpha Psy titled "Methodological Materialism" that I thought I'd point you to, in case you hadn't read it already. Here's an excerpt:

As I see things, there is no deeper epistemological concern in recognizing that methods from natural sciences are increasingly being applied to social sciences than in recognizing that (say) it is snowing more than we had forecasted.

The mistake that both Descombes and Sperber make in celebrating a false major philosophical event is their implicit commitment to the doctrine of "methodological essentialism": the idea that a field of human knowledge is defined by its proprietary methods. If this doctrine is true, then it follows that applications of the methods of natural sciences to social sciences is a big event, because, since in extant social sciences should be defined by their methods, the application of new, alien ones is not normal and should be conceived of as a conceptual confusion (Descombes' position). Unless, clearly, one admits that extant social sciences have always been a wreck to begin with (Sperber's position).

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Readers' Picks

Search All Blogs