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Fact and Method: Explanation, Confirmation, and Reality in the Natural and the Social Sciences
 
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Fact and Method: Explanation, Confirmation, and Reality in the Natural and the Social Sciences [Hardcover]

Richard W. Miller (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1987
In this bold work of broad scope and rich erudition, Richard W. Miller sets out to reorient the philosophy of science. By questioning both positivism and its leading critics, he develops new solutions to the most urgent problems about justification, explanation and truth. Using a wealth of examples from the the natural and the social sciences, "Fact and Method" applies the new account of scientific reason to specific questions of method in virtually every field of inquiry including biology, physics, history, sociology, anthropology, economics, psychology and literary theory.

For the past quarter-century, the philosophy of science has been in a crisis brought on by the failure of the positivist project of resolving all basic methodological questions by applying absolutely general rules, valid for all fields at all times. "Fact and Method" presents a new view of science in which what counts as an explanation, a cause, a confirming test or a compelling case for the existence of an unobservable is determined by frameworks of specific substantive principles, rationally adopted in light of the actual history of inquiry. Although the history of science has usually been the material for relativism, Professor Miller uses arguments of Darwin, Newton, Einstein, Galileo and others both to undermine positivist conceptions of rationality and to support the positivists' optimism that important theoretical findings are often justifiable from all reasonable perspectives.

"Fact and Method" includes new accounts of causation, explanatory adequacy, approximate truth and confirmation, together with a defense of scientific realism freed from the positivist assumptions that Professor Miller locates on both sides of the realism controversy. Throughout, the new philosophical ideas are applied to specific topics confronting social scientists or natural scientists, for example: value-freedom, methodological individualism, functional explanation, the nature of evolutionary

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review


Fact and Methodis written in a distinctive style. Where the positivists aspired to the terseness of scientific prose, Miller is discursive, digressive and generous with long illustrations. He has a wide-ranging knowledge of both the natural and the social sciences ... his arguments always relate to real scientific theories, rather than oversimplified philosophical abstractions. -- The Times Literary Supplement
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 628 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton Univ Pr; Text is Free of Markings edition (December 1987)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 069107318X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691073187
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.5 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,425,169 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not bad, October 24, 2001
By 
This review is from: Fact and Method (Paperback)
In this book Richard Miller offers an ``adequate'' scientific explanation of phenomena as an alternative to the positivist ``covering law'' model (Hume, Hempel, etc.), which is still dominant among practicing social scientists today despite that it had already been severely criticized and rejected in the field of philosophy. Miller claims that the persistent popularity of positivist methodology is due to the absence of a genuine alternative method to replace good-old positivism.

The first part criticizes of the covering law model (i.e explanation by law-like regularity), which requires any valid law (1) to be universal in its application, (2) to be empirically verifiable, and (3) to reduce causality to mere statistical correlation.

After explaining how these criteria are actually irrelevant to scientific theory, Miller develops his alternative model of ``causal mechanism,'' which, without falling into hermeneutics, adequately explains causal phenomena.

It may not be an easy read for students without the background of philosophy. After all the title of the book is _Fact and Method_; it reminds me of the likes of _Truth and Method_ and _Being and Time_. (^_^; Like the previous reviewer I read this book for Quantitative Method course tpp. We were also assigned Elster's ``Nuts and Bolts for the Social Sciences'' and other like short articles with it. Elster's should be easier to understand, but if you want to know the more rich, philosophical foundation of their methodology, you've got to read _Fact and Method_.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Horrid, a travesty, December 12, 2009
By 
This review is from: Fact and Method (Paperback)
I remember trying to read this book a few years ago. Like many contemporary professional academics, Miller is hopelessly inept as a writer.

A review here states: "Fact and Method is written in a distinctive style." What irony therein!

I know of no field of intellectual endeavour in which English compositional skills are so parsimoniously displayed as in Anglophone `philosophy', at least since about 1960. I have finally given up reading new `philosophy' books in the last few years, simply because the writing is so horrid. The last one was this one. It's dreadfully written. All the appeal of a rotting banana skin. I'm not talking in any case about presenting conceptual difficulty, but simply the inability to write a coherent English sentence. The only `philosophy' I read now is Umberto Eco. I note that someone else here has similar opinions of Miller's travesty.

I hold a degree in philosophy, by the way.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating topic poorly handled, October 8, 2006
By 
Aaron Boyden (Providence, Rhode Island) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fact and Method (Paperback)
Ostensibly, Miller is interested in the ways in which political biases can and should influence research methodology, and in ways of removing bad, often politically motivated methodology and encouraging methodology that is good, either politics free or (he thinks more often) motivated by correct politics. Certainly the influence of politics is quite pervasive, and those who claim to be "above" politics are more often than not disingenuous.

However, this goal is ill-served by Miller's placing of the discussion in terms of the dispute between old-fashioned positivism and more recent scientific realist philosophy of science. While Miller discusses many, many examples of what he sees as poor (conservative) science, and of what he sees as better (Marxist-leaning) science, in no case does he convincingly show that positivism encourages conservative science or that scientific realism encourages his prefered Marxist-leaning science. Much of the allegedly bad science he criticizes fails to live up to the old positivist standards, so it is unclear how positivism can be to blame for it, and surely the conservatives who lie about whether they're really following the positivists' rules will be just as ready to lie about whether they're following Miller's rules.

It is probably revealing that Miller seems blissfully unaware of the politics of the actual postivists and their scientific realist successors; if the debate between positivism and scientific realism were as thoroughly enmeshed in politics as Miller thinks, with realism providing support for Miller's prefered Marxist politics, it would be a point of data in need of some explanation that Neurath and Carnap, the leaders of the Logical Positivist movement, were openly Marxist in their politics, while scientific realism in the philosophy of science has mostly drawn inspiration from the arch-conservative Quine. Of course, there might be an explanation for this which is consistent with Miller's theses, but it is certainly not to be found in this book.
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