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COMMENTS: CONSTANCE PERIN.

Authors :
Perin, Constance
Source :
American Sociologist. Nov78, Vol. 13 Issue 4, p249-250. 2p.
Publication Year :
1978

Abstract

This article presents a commentary on a paper by Robert A. Stebbins in a previous issue of The American Sociologist which provided an account of professional and amateur sociology in the U.S. Stebbins' account of professional and amateur sociology unearths a set of boxes nesting in one another that according to the commenter, contain issues going to the foundations of current social science, conceptually and institutionally. The most encompassing issue is embedded in Stebbins' assertion throughout that the discipline and profession of sociology exists, has definable and agreed aims, and is thereby a special stream in science as well as within social science. He presumes that there is some accurate version of sociology into which laypeople can and should be indoctrinated. The commenter relates that many institutional structures support this version of the division of scientific labor, a version based more on professionalism and careerism than on ideas about the unity of science. Skepticism, is missing from this account of sociology. The proposal mostly takes up issues of craft, unrelated however to the research questions for which the particular tactic of volunteer sociologists would be more useful than another.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00031232
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Sociologist
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
4951518