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Faculty of Humanities

Course module - Philosophy of Social Science * FOR 2013/14 *

Code : PHIL30022
Credit rating: 20
Semester : 2

Links in this page :
Aims | Objectives | Assessment | Information * | Course Content |
Course Materials | Tutors | Timetable | Teaching Methods | Keywords


Aims

The course aims to:

• provide students with a detailed understanding of some of the issues that make up philosophy of social science in general and philosophy of economics in particular
• to help students come to terms with some central texts in the field
• encourage students to think through these issues for themselves and arrive at well-argued conclusions

Objectives (Learning Outcomes)

On successful completion of this course unit, students will be able to demonstrate:

• a critical understanding of some of the disputes that make up philosophy of social science in general and philosophy of economics in particular
• a thorough knowledge of some of the central texts of the field
• an ability to write concisely, relevantly and analytically about the issues raised, both in an essay and under examination conditions

Assessment

TBC

Information *


Pre-requisites: 40 PHIL credits at Level 2

Course Content

This course will survey some issues that are shared by all of the social sciences and some that are specific to economics and history. Topics covered will include the problem of reflexive predictions, the role of causal explanation in social science and its relation to functional, structural and narrative explanations; reductionism and “methodological individualism”; the supposed dichotomy of explanation and understanding; conceptual issues in rational choice theory; values, ideology and objectivity in social science.

Course Materials

Tutor(s)

Uebel, Professor Thomas

Timetable

For 2013/14:

LECTURE: Monday 2-4pm
TUTORIALS: tbc

Teaching Methods

One 2-hour lecture and one 1-hour tutorial per week.

Preliminary reading

H. Kincaid, Philosophical Foundations of the Social Sciences (Cambridge: CUP, 1996), or M. Hollis, The Philosophy of Social Science (Cambridge: CUP, 1994)

Keywords

possibility of social explanation
possibility of social understanding
possibility of social critique in social science

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