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On scientific method

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Title: On scientific method


1
On scientific method
Presentation 7 Environment and Sustainable
Development course UNU-MERIT PhD programme
  • René Kemp

2
What is science?
  • It is what scientists do reading, researching,
    writing, talking to each other, create clubs
  • It is the process of hypothesis formation,
    empirical testing, hypothesis reformulation,
    retesting, and so on
  • Falsification or verification?

3
Hypotheses of Adeoti
  • H1a The introduction of the S.I.8/S.I.9
    environmental regulatory law has led to increased
    adoption of wastewater treatment plants in the
    Nigerian manufacturing industry.
  • H2a The adoption of EBT will be positively
    correlated with the firms internal capability
    for innovation as defined by the share of
    technical personnel in the total employment.
  •  H2b The adoption of EBT may be related to the
    existing level of investment in capital equipment
    for the main production activities.
  • H2c The capability of a firm to adopt an EBT
    will be inherently determined by the
    technological knowledge related network contacts
    a firm has.
  • H2f The type of EBT adopted for compliance with
    the S.I.8/S.I.9 regulation depends on the
    strategy for environmental policy implementation,
    whether co-operative or antagonistic.

4
Questions of transitions project
  • Q1 Are there identifiable transition phases such
    as the predevelopment stage, take-off stage,
    breakthrough stage and stabilisation stage? Can
    such stages be operationalised?
  • Q2 To what extent were TT foreseen, expected and
    intentionally managed, at the different stages?
    What was the role of widely shared expectations?
  • Q3 Are there common strategic behavioural
    patterns in transitions (such as regime actors
    first fighting a new development pioneered by
    niche actors and later on sustaining it)?
  • Q4 What role did incremental innovation play in
    TT? Did it help to sustain the old regime
    (sailing ship effect) by defending it against a
    new development or did it provide opportunities
    for further change (stepping stone dynamic)?
  • Q5 Does the interplay of technical change and
    institutional change differ in different
    transitions and in various phases of a particular
    transition? Does technical change lead/precede
    institutional change or is it the other way
    round?
  • Q6 What was the role of public authorities (in
    different phases)? What do the transitions tell
    about the proper role of public authorities and
    public policy in various transition stages?

5
What characterises social science?
  • A world that is infinitely complex
  • In which people are suspended in webs of
    significance (Geertz)
  • reflective thought precedes science which merely
    employs it more methodologically. Man cannot live
    among things without forming ideas about them
    Because these notions are closer to us than the
    realities to which they correspond, we naturally
    tend to substitute them for the realities,
    concentrating our speculations upon them
    (Durkheim)

6
Theoretical frameworks are not falsified but
accepted as the basis for research
  • If you are a neoclassical economists you do not
    seek to falsify the neoclassical framework of
    rational actors, you work with it
  • Are theories falsified? Some are, others are not.
  • Theories are appraised in the light of
    conflicting evidence (an example is the theory of
    Boserup about population pressure facilitating
    technological change)
  • Theories may be true (valid) in certain
    circumstances

7
Relativist position
  • Every interpretation attempts to attain clarity
    and certainty, but no matter how clear an
    interpretation as such appears, it cannot on this
    account claim to be the causally valid
    interpretation. On this level it must remain only
    a peculiarly plausible hypothesis (Weber)

8
The role of theory
  • It offers a perspective (a theoretical lens) on
    social worlds which involves categories and
    certain ontological assumptions
  • Which may be used for offering explanation using
    certain research methods and causal schemes
  • It facilitates communication between researchers
    using the same theory and even between those that
    alternative theories

9
Social science questions and the answers to them
  • Why is the Netherlands more rich than India is?
    Is it because of natural resource endowments,
    religion, culture, or because of all things
    together, including contingencies the importance
    of which cannot be determined in a definitive way
  • Why did the plain crash? Because of the weather
    conditions, the engine being faulty, the pilot
    doing faulty things did the engine not work
    properly because of bad design or because of bad
    servicing who is to blame for bad servicing, the
    person doing the servicing or the procedures why
    were the procedures inappropriate, is it because
    the issue was not given proper attention by the
    company, something made possible by the lack of
    inspection by the government (why was that?)

10
Causal variables within different social science
approaches of innovation
Actor network Actors, artifacts and alignment (3-As)
Regime approaches Rules, roles, regulations, and routines (4-Rs)
Social constructivism Social actors, social meaning, sociotechnical closure (3 Ss)
Political science Policy science Ideology, interests and influence (power) (3 Is) Problems, policy belief systems, policies programmes, and politics (4 Ps)
Economics Incentives and choice
11
Intentionalist and monocausal explanations are
inappropriate for system innovation and societal
change The interplay of factors is important
(cause-effect chains)We may not have the 2nd
world war without Hitler but as an explanation
this is poor and teaches no lessons
12
Quantitative versus qualitative methods
  • Quantitative approaches relying on statistical
    significance
  • Qualitative approaches relying on interpretative
    understanding (verstehen) narrative method
    (story telling)

13
Source Spicer (2004)
14
Synergies
  • Quantitative methods may help to test whether
    certain findings apply wider
  • Qualitative research may help to interpret odd
    findings of quantitative research or qualify the
    findings
  • Qualitative research may generate hypotheses
  • The robustness of quantitative findings can be
    assessed
  • When it comes to policy advice, contextual
    aspects may be considered without getting
    bewildered by sheer complexity

15
Source Spicer (2004)
16
Phronesis
  • Aristotle distinguishes between two intellectual
    virtues sophia and phronesis. Sophia (usually
    translated "wisdom") is the ability to think well
    about the nature of the world, and is used in our
    attempts to discover why the world is the way it
    is (this is sometimes equated with science)
    sophia involves deliberation concerning universal
    truths
  • Phronesis is the ability to think about how and
    why we should act in order to change things, and
    especially to change our lives for the better
  • Phronesis is about practical wisdom/judgement
    routed in experience

17
  • Phronesis is concerned with particulars, because
    it is concerned with how to act in particular
    situations. One can learn the principles of
    action, but applying them in the real world, in
    situations which one could not have foreseen,
    requires experience of the world
  • The importance of phronesis to contemporary
    thought has been spelled out by Bent Flyvbjerg in
    his book Making Social Science Matter Why Social
    Inquiry Fails and How it Can Succeed Again
    Flyvbjerg argues that instead of trying to
    emulate the natural sciences, social science
    should be practiced as phronesis

18
  • Phronetic social science focuses on four
    value-rational questions, which are answered for
    specific cases of social action (1) Where are we
    going? (2) Who gains and who loses, by which
    mechanisms of power? (3) Is this development
    desirable? (4) What should we do about it?

Flyvbjerg (2001)
19
Detached analysis or engagement with practioners?
  • Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are
    useful George E.P. Box
  • Abstract analysis of institutional arrangements
    that would be optimal in idealized situations
    is at best a useful heuristic for the main work,
    and at worst a diversion from it Nelson and
    Winter (1982)

20
Schumpeter on method
  • What distinguishes the 'scientific' economist
    from all the other people who think, talk, and
    write about economic topics is a command of
    techniques that we class under three heads
    history, statistics, and 'theory'. The three
    together make up what we shall call Economic
    Analysis. Of these three fundamental fields,
    economic history -- which issues into and
    includes present day facts -- is by far the most
    important. I wish to state right now that if,
    starting my work in economics afresh, I were told
    that I could study only one of the three but have
    my choice, it would economic history that I would
    choose. And this on three grounds. (1) First
    the subject matter of economics is essentially a
    unique process in historic time. Nobody can hope
    to understand the economic phenomena of any
    epoch, who has not an adequate command of
    historical facts and an adequate amount of
    historical sense ()
  • (2) Second, the historical report cannot be
    purely economic but must inevitably reflect also
    'institutional' facts that are not purely
    economic ()
  • (3) Third, it is, I believe, the fact that most
    of the fundamental errors currently committed in
    economic analysis are due to a lack of historical
    experience more often than to any other
    shortcoming of the economist's equipment.

Schumpeter in History of Economic Analysis
21
Pointers about PhD research
  • Why do you want to do this research? (is it
    really what you want to be working on for 3
    years, does it fit with your research
    capability?)
  • What do you expect to find?
  • What framework (theoretical lens) do you use (and
    why do you use this)
  • What other frameworks are there? Is your
    framework better or simply more convenient for
    you?

22
Pointers -- continued
  • The problem definition should be as specific as
    possible
  • Engage in multi-method analysis (or make use of
    the findings of others)
  • case studies are useful in their own right but
    also help to generate hypotheses and interpret
    research findings obtained with different
    methods they may be used for analytical
    generalisation
  • Econometric studies allow for statistical
    generalisation
  • Models are rigorous

23
On interpretation
  1. Determine the mileage of different explanations
    (can it be explained in power terms, knowledge
    terms, in terms of economic variables?
  2. Determine the robustness of your results
  3. Acknowledge inconsistencies (instead of hiding
    them)

24
Presenting your results
  • What have you learned?
  • Did you find what you expected to find?
  • How do your results compare to those of the
    literature?
  • Are the others wrong? How solid are your results?
  • What is your original contribution? This should
    be clearly and explicitly stated
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