The Craft of Sociology

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The Craft of Sociology Epistemological Preliminaries Pierre Bourdieu Jean-Claude Chamboredon Jean-Claude Passeron Edited by Beate Krais Translated by Richard Nice W DE G Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York 1991

Contents Preface to the English edition (B. Krais) Preface to the second French edition (P. Bourdieu, J.-C. Chamboredon, J.-C. Passeron) v x Introduction Epistemology and methodology Teaching research 3 Epistemology of the social sciences and epistemology of the natural sciences 6 Methodology and the displacement of vigilance 8 The epistemological order of reasons 11 Part One The break 1 The social fact is won against the illusion of immediate knowledge 13 1.1 Prenotions and techniques for breaking with them 13 1.2 The illusion of transparency and the principle of non-consciousness 15 1.3 Nature and culture: substance and System of relations 19 1.4 Spontaneous sociology and the powers of language 20 1.5 The temptation to prophesy 24 1.6 Theory and the theoretical tradition 26 1.7 Theory of sociological knowledge and theory of the social System 29 Part Two Constructing the object 2 The social fact is constructed: the forms of empiricist surrender 33 2.1 "The abdications of empiricism" 35 2.2 Hypotheses or presuppositions 38 2.3 The spurious neutrality of techniques: constructed object or artefact 40 2.4 Analogy and the construction of hypotheses 49 2.5 Model and theory 52 Part Three Applied rationalism 3 The social fact is won, constructed, and confirmed: the hierarchy of epistemological acts 57 3.1 The implication of Operations and the hierarchy of epistemological acts 57 3.2 The System of propositions and systematic verification 63 3.3 Epistemological couples 66 Conclusion Sociology of knowledge and epistemology Outline of a sociology of the positivist temptation in sociology 69 The sociologist in Society 72 The "scientific city" and epistemological vigilance 74

Xll Illustrative Texts Contents Remarks on the choice of texts 80 Foreword An epistemology of composition 81 Text No. 1: Georges Canguilhem, "Sur une epistemologie concordataire" 81 The three degrees of vigilance 87 Text No. 2: Gaston Bachelard, Le rationalisme applique 87 Introduction Epistemology and methodology Epistemology and reconstructed logic 91 Text No. 3: Abraham Kaplan, The Conduct of Inquiry 91 Part One The break 1.1 Prenotions and techniques for breaking with them 93 Prenotions as an epistemological obstacle 93 Text No. 4: Emile Durkheim, The Rules of Sociological Method 93 Provisional definition as a means of escaping from prenotions 97 Text No. 5: Marcel Mauss, "La priere" 97 Logical analysis as an aid to epistemological vigilance 100 Text No. 6: John H. Goldthorpe and David Lockwood, "Affluence and the British Class Structure" 100 1.2 The illusion of transparency and the principle of non-consciousness 109 Artificialism as the basis of the illusion of reflexiveness 109 Text No. 7: Emile Durkheim, Education and Sociology 109 Methodic ignorance 111 Text No. 8: Emile Durkheim, The Rules of Sociological Method 111 The principle of determinism as the negation of the illusion of transparency 114 Text No. 9: Emile Durkheim, "Sociology and the Social Sciences" 114 The code and the document 117 Text No. 10: Frangois Simiand, "Methode historique et science sociale" 117 1.3 Nature and culture: substance and System of relations 119 Nature and history 119 Text No. 11: Karl Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy 119 Karl Marx, Grundrisse 119 Nature as a psychological invariant and the fallacy of inverting cause and effect 123 Text No. 12: Emile Durkheim, The Rules of Sociological Method 123 The sterility of explaining historical specificities by universal tendencies 126 Text No. 13: Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism 126 1.4 Spontaneous sociology and the powers of language 130 The nosography of language 130 Text No. 14: Maxime Chastaing, "Wittgenstein et le probleme de la connaissance d'autrui" 130

Xlll Metaphorical schemes in biology 135 Text No. 15: Georges Canguilhem, La connaissance de la vie 135 Georges Canguilhem, "Le tout et la partie dans la pensee biologique" 136 1.5 The temptation to prophesy 139 The propheticism of the professor and the intellectual 139 Text No. 16: Max Weber, The Methodology of the Social Sciences 139 Text No. 17: Bennett M. Berger, "Sociology and the Intellectuals" 140 1.6 Theory and the theoretical tradition 144 Architectonic reason and polemical reason 144 Text No. 18: Gaston Bachelard, The Philosophy of No 144 Part Two Constructing the object The method of political economy 147 Text No. 19: Karl Marx: Grundrisse 147 The positivist illusion of presuppositionless science 149 Text No. 20: Max Weber, The Methodology of the Social Sciences 149 "Treat social facts as things" 154 Text No. 21: Emile Durkheim, The Rules of Sociological Method 154 Emile Durkheim, Preface to the Second Edition of The Rules of Sociological Method 155 2.1 "The abdications of empiricism" 157 The epistemological vector 157 Text No. 22: Gaston Bachelard, The New Scientific Spirit 157 2.2 Hypotheses or presuppositions 160 The instrument is a theory in action 160 Text No. 23: Elihu Katz, "The Two-Step Flow of Communication" 160 The statistician needs to know what he is doing 166 Text No. 24: Fran$ois Simiand, Statistique et experience 166 2.3 The spurious neutrality of techniques: constructed object or artefact 169 The interview and the forms of Organization of experience 169 Text No. 25: Leonard Schatzman and Anselm Strauss, "Social Class and Modes of Communication" 169 Subjective images and objective frame of reference 179 Text No. 26: John H. Goldthorpe and David Lockwood, "Affluence and the British Class Structure" 179 Categories of native language and construction of scientific facts 181 Text No. 27: Claude Levi-Strauss, Introduction to the Work of Marcel Mauss 181 Text No. 28: Marcel Mauss, "Introduction ä Panalyse de quelques phenomenes religieux" 182 Text No. 29: Bronislaw Malinowski, Argonauts of the Western Pacific 183 2.4 Analogy and construction of hypotheses 185 The use of ideal types in sociology 185 Text No. 30: Max Weber, Economy and Society 185 Max Weber, The Methodology of the Social Sciences 187

XIV Contents 2.5 Model and theory 191 The summa and the cathedral: deep analogies, the product of a mental habit 191 Text No. 31: Erwin Panofsky, Gothic Architecture and Scholasticism 191 The heuristic function of analogy 194 Text No. 32: Pierre Duhem, The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory 194 Analogy, theory, and hypothesis 196 Text No. 33: Norman R. Campbell, Foundations of Science 196 Part Three Applied rationalism 3.1 The implication of Operations and the hierarchy of epistemological acts 201 Theory and experimentation 201 Text No. 34: Georges Canguilhem, La connaissance de la vie 201 Georges Canguilhem, "Legons sur la methode" 203 The favoured objects of empiricism 207 Text No. 35: Charles Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination 207 3.2 The System of propositions and systematic verification 211 Theory as a methodological challenge 211 Text No. 36: Louis Hjelmslev, Language 211 Circular arguments 214 Text No. 37: Edgar Wind, "Some Points of Contact between History and Natural Science" 214 Proof by a System of convergent probabilities 218 Text No. 38: Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species 218 3.3 Epistemological couples 221 Philosophy as dialogue 221 Text No. 39: Gaston Bachelard, Le rationalisme applique 221 Neo-positivism: sensualism coupled with formalism 225 Text No. 40: Georges Canguilhem, "Legons sur la methode" 225 Formalism as intuitionism 229 Text No. 41: Emile Durkheim, "Sociology and Its Scientific Field" 229 Conclusion Sociology of knowledge and epistemology Science and its worldly audience 233 Text No. 42: Gaston Bachelard, La formation de l'esprit scientifique 233 For a reform of sociological understanding 240 Text No. 43: Marcel Maget, Guide d'etude directe des comportements culturels 240 Cross-checks and the transitivity of critiques 245 Text No. 44: Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post- Critical Philosophy 245

Contents "Meanwhile, I have come to know all the diseases of sociological understanding" An interview with Pierre Bourdieu, by Beate Krais 247 List of texts 261 Suggestions for further reading 265 Index of names 269 XV