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Thinking Through Methods: A Social Science Primer
Barnes and Noble
Thinking Through Methods: A Social Science Primer
Current price: $99.00
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Barnes and Noble
Thinking Through Methods: A Social Science Primer
Current price: $99.00
Size: Hardcover
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Sociological research is hard enough alreadyyou don’t need to make it even harder by smashing about like a bull in a china shop, not knowing what you’re doing or where you’re heading. Or so says John Levi Martin in this witty, insightful, and desperately needed primer on how to practice rigorous social science.
Thinking Through Methods
focuses on the practical decisions that you will need to make as a researcher
where
the data you are working with comes from and
how
that data relates to all the possible data you could have gathered.
This is a user’s guide to sociological research, designed to be used at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Rather than offer mechanical rules and applications, Martin chooses instead to team up with the reader to think through and with methods. He acknowledges that we are human beingsand thus prone to the same cognitive limitations and distortions found in subjectsand proposes ways to compensate for these limitations. Martin also forcefully argues for principled symmetry, contending that bad ethics makes for bad research, and vice versa.
is a landmark workone that students will turn to again and again throughout the course of their sociological research.
Thinking Through Methods
focuses on the practical decisions that you will need to make as a researcher
where
the data you are working with comes from and
how
that data relates to all the possible data you could have gathered.
This is a user’s guide to sociological research, designed to be used at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Rather than offer mechanical rules and applications, Martin chooses instead to team up with the reader to think through and with methods. He acknowledges that we are human beingsand thus prone to the same cognitive limitations and distortions found in subjectsand proposes ways to compensate for these limitations. Martin also forcefully argues for principled symmetry, contending that bad ethics makes for bad research, and vice versa.
is a landmark workone that students will turn to again and again throughout the course of their sociological research.