Results 261 to 270 of about 1,200,212 (344)
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Sociology of Science

Annual Review of Sociology, 1975
Sociology of science deals with the social conditions and effects of science, and with the social structures and processes of scientific activity. Science is a cultural tradi­ tion, preserved and transmitted from generation to generation partly because it is valued in its own right, and partly because of its wide technological applications.
Joseph Ben-David, Teresa A. Sullivan
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Sociology of Science

Philosophia Scientiæ, 2013
Martin Kusch
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‘Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted’: Searching for the value of metrics and altmetrics in sociology of sport journals

International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 2022
Metrics, and increasingly altmetrics, are a pervasive aspect of academic life. A proliferation of digital tools available have seen greater emphasis on the quantification of the ‘performance’ of individual journals.
Rebecca Olive   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sociology of Science Without the Sociology

Social Studies of Science, 1990
Whatever readers of Social Studies of Science think of Lawrence J. Prelli's attempt to bring together rhetoric and science studies, they will probably approve of his reading; the case studies on which he bases his argument are almost all by science studies researchers associated with this journal.
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The Disciplinary Status of Consumer Behavior: A Sociology of Science Perspective on Key Controversies

, 2010
Critics within the consumer behavior field have consistently debated three fundamental issues about the field’s defining properties and goals: (1) whether consumer behavior should be an independent discipline, (2) what is (and is not) consumer behavior ...
D. Macinnis, V. Folkes
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Pioneers of Sociological Science

2021
Goldthorpe reveals the genealogy of present-day sociological science through studies of the key contributions made by seventeen pioneers in the field, ranging from John Graunt and Edmond Halley in the mid-seventeenth century to Otis Dudley Duncan, James Coleman and Raymond Boudon in the late twentieth.
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Sociologism in Philosophy of Science

Metaphilosophy, 1972
SummaryIn a nutshell, the present essay claims this: First, the classical problem of knowledge has recently shifted from, How do I know? to, How do we know?–from psychology to sociology. As a phenomenological matter this is a great improvement, as a solution to the problem of rationality it is erroneous and immoral.
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