VOLUME ONE
CANONS AND CUSTODIANS (SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY IN THE 20TH CENTURY)
SECTION ONE
LANGUAGE, EXPLANATION AND REALITY
A J Ayer
The Elimination of Metaphysics and The a priori
B Russell
How a priori Knowledge Is Possible
I Berlin
Verification
C G Hemple
The Function of General Laws in History
I Berlin
Empirical Propositions and Hypothetical Statements
I Berlin
Logical Translation
SECTION TWO
POPPERIAN INTERVENTIONS AND THE PROBLEMS OF POSITIVISM
K Popper
Fundamental Problems and A Theory of Method
K Popper
Science, Conjectures and Refutations
K Popper
Conjectural Knowledge
My Solution of the Problem of Induction
W O Quine
Two Dogmas of Empiricism
A Giddens
Positivism and Its Critics
SECTION THREE
CONCEPT FORMATION IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
E Nagel
Problems of Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences
C G Hempel
Typological Methods in the Social Sciences
A Schutz
Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences
VOLUME TWO
UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC PRACTICE
SECTION ONE
ACKNOWLEDGING IMAGINATION AND COMPLEXITY IN THE SOCIAL WORLD
M Weber
Ideal Types and Objectivity in Social Science and Social Policy
A Schutz
Common-Sense and Scientific Interpretation of Human Action
F A Hayek
Scientism
F Machlup
Are the Social Sciences Really Inferior?
SECTION TWO
INTERPRETATION AND MEANING IN SOCIAL SCIENCE
C Taylor
Interpretation and the Sciences of Man
H Garfinkel
Routine and Everyday Activities and Common-Sense Knowledge of Social Structures
W Outhwaite
Naturalisms and Anti-Naturalisms
R Rorty
Science and Solidarity
M J Smith
Empiricism, Idealism and Realism
An Essay in Social Psychology
VOLUME THREE
(NATURAL AND SOCIAL) SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE AS A SOCIAL PRODUCT
SECTION ONE
PARADIGMS ETC
T Kuhn
Normal Science and The Nature and Necessity of Scientific Revolutions
A Musgrave
Kuhn's Second Thoughts
M Mulkay and G N Gilbert
Putting Philosophy to Work
H Collins
The TEA Set
Tacit Knowledge and Scientific Networks
W O Hagstrom
Science as Gift-Giving
B Latour and S Woolgar
The Cycle of Credibility
D Bloor
The Strong Programme in the Sociology of Knowledge
P T Manicas and A Rosenberg
Naturalism, Epistemological Individualism and The Strong Programme
M Gibbons
Mode 1 and Mode 2 Knowledge production
SECTION TWO
... AND WHAT SCIENTISTS SHOULD DO!
I Lakatos
Falsification and the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes
K Popper
Normal Science and Its Dangers
P Feyerabend
On the Critique of Scientific Reason
L Laudan
For Method
Answering the Relativist Critique of Methodology of Kuhn and Feyerabend
SECTION THREE
PARADIGMS AND RESEARCH PROGRAMMES IN SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC PRACTICE
M Blaug
Kuhn versus Lakatos, or Paradigms versus Research Programmes in the History of Economics
R E Backhouse
The Lakatosian Legacy in Economic Methodology
M Landau
Objectivity, Neutrality and Paradigms in Political Science
VOLUME FOUR
REINVENTING THE SOCIAL SCIENCES (TOWARDS A POSTDISCIPLINARY FUTURE)
SECTION ONE
NEW DEBATES AND SITUATED KNOWLEDGES
R Harre and M Krausz
The Debate between Relativists and Absolutists
A Giddens
Structuralism, Post-Structuralism and the Production of Culture
R Bhaskar
Societies
A Sayer
Problems of Explanation and the Aims of Social Science
S Harding
From the Woman Question in Science to the Science Question in Feminism
V Olesen
Feminisms and Models of Qualitative Research
S Harding
Is Science Multicultural? Challenges, Resources, Opportunities, Uncertainties
SECTION TWO
APPLICATIONS
D N McCloskey
The Rhetoric of Economics
Z Bauman
Is There a Postmodern Sociology?
U Maki
Two Philosophies of the Rhetoric of Economics
T Lawson
A Realist Perspective on Contemporary Economic Theory
A Sayer
Geohistorical Explanation and Problems of Narrative
M J Smith
Prospects for a Post-Disciplinary Social Science