1st Edition

Verstehen The Uses of Understanding in the Social Sciences

By Michael Martin Copyright 2000
276 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

In late nineteenth-century German academic circles, the term verstehen (literally, understanding, or comprehension) came to be associated with the view that social phenomena must be understood from the point of view of the social actor. Advocates of this approach were opposed by positivists who stressed the unity of method between the social and natural sciences and an external, experimental,... Read more
Preface, Introduction, 1. The Classical Verstehen Position, 2. The Positivists’ Critique I: Not a Method of Verification, 3. The Positivists’ Critique II: Not a Necessary Condition for Understanding, 4. Verstehen and Ordinary Language Philosophy, 5. Verstehen and Situational Logic, 6. Verstehen and Phenomenology, 7. Verstehen and the Sciences of Man, 8. Verstehen and Anthropology, 9. Verstehen and Critical Theory, Conclusion: Towards a Theory of Methodological Pluralism, Index

Biography

Michael Martin