Arthur L. Stinchcombe has earned a reputation as a leading practitioner
of methodology in sociology and related disciplines. Throughout his
distinguished career he has championed the idea that to be an effective
sociologist, one must use many methods. This incisive work introduces
students to the logic of those methods.
The Logic of Social Research orients students to a set of logical
problems that all methods must address to study social causation. Almost
all sociological theory asserts that some social conditions produce
other social conditions, but the theoretical links between causes and
effects are not easily supported by observation. Observations cannot
directly show causation, but they can reject or support causal theories
with different degrees of credibility. As a result, sociologists have
created four main types of methods that Stinchcombe terms
quantitative, historical, ethnographic, and experimental to
support their theories. Each method has value, and each has its uses for
different research purposes.
Accessible and astute, The Logic of Social Research offers an image of
what sociology is, what it's all about, and what the craft of the
sociologist consists of.