The Scientific Study of Society

foreword by Ken Binmore
2003, ISBN 1-4020-7321-6, Hardbound
>>A sample of the book can be downloaded from the Kluwer website
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John Goldthorpe and Bob Scott debate The Scientific Study of Society in the latest issue of the British Journal of Sociology, vol 55, issue 1, March 2004.
There has always been some scepticism about social science. In certain quarters today there is much more doubt about the possibility of drawing on scientific information when addressing public policy issues. Attacks on social science, not always well informed, often go hand-in-hand with activity that claims to be social science, yet bears little resemblance to anything scientific. This book makes the case for the scientific study of society by reviewing what social scientists actually do. This is not an abstract discussion. Recent journal literature on several topics such as crime, migration and religion, as studied by anthropology, economics, political science, social psychology and sociology, demonstrate the achievements of social science. The book argues that modest achievements are to be preferred to the immodest claims of social poets and social prophets. Sample of the book REVIEWS ” This great book by Max Steuer uniquely approaches a variety of important questions, including crime, housing, money, migration, religion and the family, from the viewpoint of all the five major social sciences. It is dense with fascinating facts and viewpoints. It is a must read for every practitioner and user of social science, as it is a much needed counterweight to the overspecialization of almost all social science”. George A. Akerlof, Goldman Professor of Economics, University of California, Berkleley, 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics “Steuer describes, defends, and celebrates the social sciences in this provocative book. He talks straight, expresses himself clearly, and captures the aspirations of all of us who ‘do’ social science”. Kenneth A. Shepsle, George Markham Professor of Government, Center for Basic Research in the Social Sciences Harvard University ” With remarkable succinctness Steuer clarifies for both insiders and outsiders the domains of the five main social sciences by describing their current contributions to our understanding of a half-dozen core concepts (crime, family, housing, migration, money, and religion). Steuer dares to ask tough questions. Even more daringly, he gives some tough answers”. William J. McGuire, Professor of Psychology, Yale University ” One of the consequences of Max Steuer’s brilliant idea to compare the study of particular topics across the social sciences is to reveal differing academic and scientific standards. The book is a challenge to sceptics who either deny the existence of social science, or bend the term to cover unscientific speculation. Steuer’s landmark book will be required reading for those who wish to debate these issues”. Peter Abell, Eric Sosnow Professor of Management, London School of Economics, Director, LSE Interdisciplinary Institute of Management ” Knowing what the social sciences are, and what they are not, is problematic these days because of the arrival of a variety of impostors that have sprung up in departments of literature and media studies as well as within the social sciences themselves. Rather than enter into a rhetorical debate about the validity of these competing intellectual enterprises, Max Steuer has adopted an approach that is refreshingly empirical and common-sensical. Anyone who wants to know what social scientists do and why it is interesting and important should read this book. The reader will come away with a good appreciation of the unglamorous but honest work of gathering and analyzing data, making and testing hypotheses, theorizing and synthesizing, that represent the best of social science. This empirical study of good practice in the social sciences will empower the reader to see, without much difficulty, the difference between the scientific study of society and its rhetorical and ideological alternatives”. Douglas Gale, Professor and Chair, Department of Economics, New York University BY THE SAME AUTHOR (with Janet Holland) Mathematical Sociology, A Selective Annotated Bibliography, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1969 (Steuer et al) The Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on the United Kingdom, Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1973. After the Crisis – Longer-Term Prospects for the Economy Of Ghana, Ghana Universities Press, 1973. Culture and Optimality, STICERD, Theoretical Economics, TE/89/206, 1989. Miracles and Alien Abduction, CPNSS Discussion Paper, DP 38/99, March 1999. Film script for the feature film The Committee, directed by Peter Sykes |