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Sociology as a scientific discipline: the post-positivist conception of J. Alexander and P. Kolomi

stmm. 2022 (4): 7-29

DOI https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.007

VALERIY VORONA, Doctor of Sciences in Economics, Professor, Academician of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Principal Research Fellow at the Department of History and Theory of Sociology, Institute of Sociology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (12, Shovkovychna St., Kyiv, 01021)

valeriy.vorona.is@gmail.com

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4694-1618

This paper presents an explanation of the post-positivist conception of sociological science. J. Alexander and P. Colomi implicitly formulated the elements of this conception in a number of their publications. They interpreted sociology as a number of competing theoretical traditions. These traditions consist of two genres: generalized discourse and their contextual research programs. The development of sociology occurs as a result of the competition of theoretical traditions. The existence of these traditions depends on their adaptation and development. Theoretical traditions develop as a result of elaboration, revision, reconstruction and expropriation. The competition of theoretical traditions is complicated by social aberrations in the professional scientific community. The productivity of this competition can provide sociological metatheorizing.

Keywords: postpositivism, epistemology, theoretical tradition, research program, generalized discourse, theoretical competition, metatheorizing

References Alexander, J.C. (1982). Theoretical Logic in Sociology. Volume 1: Positivism, Presuppositions, and Current Controversies. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Alexander, J.C. (1990). Beyond the Epistemological Dilemma: General Theory in a Postpositivist Mode. Sociological Forum, 5(4), 531–544.

Alexander, J. (1992a). New theoretical directions in sociology. [In Ukrainian]. Philosophical and sociological thought, 2, 121–130. [=Александер 1992a]

Alexander, J. (1992b). New theoretical directions in sociology. [In Ukrainian]. Philosophical and sociological thought, 4, 132–156. [=Александер 1992b]

Alexander, J.C., Colomy, P. (1985). Toward Neo-Functionalism. Sociological Theory, 3(2), 11–23.

Alexander, J.C., Colomy, P. (1990). Neofunctionalism Today: Reconstructing a Theoretical Tradition. In: G. Ritzer (Ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory (pp. 33–67). New York: Columbia University Press.

Colomy, P. (1991). Metatheorizing in a Postpositivist Frame. Sociological Perspectives, 34(3), 269–286.

Colomy, P. (1991). Metatheorizing: A Preliminary and Promising Program Metatheorizing in Sociology by George Ritzer. Sociological Perspectives, 35(3), 537–541.

Reznik, V. (2021). Analysis of research programs: a sociological perspective. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: Theory, Methods, Marketing, 4, 104–128. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2021.04.104. [=Резнік 2021].

Tancher, V. (1994). Introduction. The Theory in sociology: the peculiarities and the trends of development. [In Russian]. In: V. Tancher (Ed.), Sociological Theory Today: collection of articles by American and Ukrainian theorists (pp. 3–11). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. [=Танчер 1994]

Received 17.09.2022

Sociology as a scientific discipline: the post-positivist conception of J. Alexander and P. Kolomi

stmm. 2022 (4): 7-29

DOI https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.007

VALERIY VORONA, Doctor of Sciences in Economics, Professor, Academician of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Principal Research Fellow at the Department of History and Theory of Sociology, Institute of Sociology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (12, Shovkovychna St., Kyiv, 01021)

valeriy.vorona.is@gmail.com

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4694-1618

This paper presents an explanation of the post-positivist conception of sociological science. J. Alexander and P. Colomi implicitly formulated the elements of this conception in a number of their publications. They interpreted sociology as a number of competing theoretical traditions. These traditions consist of two genres: generalized discourse and their contextual research programs. The development of sociology occurs as a result of the competition of theoretical traditions. The existence of these traditions depends on their adaptation and development. Theoretical traditions develop as a result of elaboration, revision, reconstruction and expropriation. The competition of theoretical traditions is complicated by social aberrations in the professional scientific community. The productivity of this competition can provide sociological metatheorizing.

Keywords: postpositivism, epistemology, theoretical tradition, research program, generalized discourse, theoretical competition, metatheorizing

References Alexander, J.C. (1982). Theoretical Logic in Sociology. Volume 1: Positivism, Presuppositions, and Current Controversies. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Alexander, J.C. (1990). Beyond the Epistemological Dilemma: General Theory in a Postpositivist Mode. Sociological Forum, 5(4), 531–544.

Alexander, J. (1992a). New theoretical directions in sociology. [In Ukrainian]. Philosophical and sociological thought, 2, 121–130. [=Александер 1992a]

Alexander, J. (1992b). New theoretical directions in sociology. [In Ukrainian]. Philosophical and sociological thought, 4, 132–156. [=Александер 1992b]

Alexander, J.C., Colomy, P. (1985). Toward Neo-Functionalism. Sociological Theory, 3(2), 11–23.

Alexander, J.C., Colomy, P. (1990). Neofunctionalism Today: Reconstructing a Theoretical Tradition. In: G. Ritzer (Ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory (pp. 33–67). New York: Columbia University Press.

Colomy, P. (1991). Metatheorizing in a Postpositivist Frame. Sociological Perspectives, 34(3), 269–286.

Colomy, P. (1991). Metatheorizing: A Preliminary and Promising Program Metatheorizing in Sociology by George Ritzer. Sociological Perspectives, 35(3), 537–541.

Reznik, V. (2021). Analysis of research programs: a sociological perspective. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: Theory, Methods, Marketing, 4, 104–128. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2021.04.104. [=Резнік 2021].

Tancher, V. (1994). Introduction. The Theory in sociology: the peculiarities and the trends of development. [In Russian]. In: V. Tancher (Ed.), Sociological Theory Today: collection of articles by American and Ukrainian theorists (pp. 3–11). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. [=Танчер 1994]

Received 17.09.2022

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