robert-brydie replied to your post: Today I learned that feminist epistemology does…
I think “the” scientific method is incompatibly with sociology, as well as the practice of the natural sciences. Methodological pluralism enables the adaptation of the most suitable method of researching the object of study.That is true. I forget that the scientific method of the natural sciences has its differences.
I disagree. To use the words of Durkheim, “Indeed our main objective is to extend the scope of scientific rationalism to cover human behavior by demonstrating that, in the light of the past, it is capable of being reduced to relationship of cause and effect, which, by an operation no less rational, can then be transformed into rules of action for the future” (1895).
The purpose of our science is to determine why society behaves the way it does: to determine the cause and effect relationships that drive social interaction and development. To do this, I believe, like Durkheim, we should rely on the method that proven itself objectively reliable and valid: the scientific method.