Abstract
Sociology is a multi-purposive field of study. There are inbuilt dualisms in the questions that can be asked about the basic principles of sociological inquiry. One such dualism exists between a positivistic-individualist-structuralist vision on the one hand, and an interpretative-communal-cultural vision on the other. A second kind of dualism can be found in the tensions between an actor-oriented and an institution-oriented perspective. A third type of dualism is found in the contradictory claims for disciplinary identity and for interdisciplinarity. Such polar oppositions may be combined but the tensions between them cannot be removed.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Allardt, E. (1999). The future of the social sciences in the 21st century - A comment. Current Sociology, 47(4), 13–17. https://doi.org/10.1177/0011392199047004004
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