Abstract
AbstractThe social sciences are still young, and their interaction with older siblings such as philosophy and theology is still necessarily tentative. This paper outlines three ways in which humanistic disciplines such as philosophy and theology might inform the social sciences and three in which the social sciences might inform the humanities in turn, proceeding in each case by way of brief “case studies” to exemplify the relation. This typology is illustrative rather than exhaustive, but each of its halves nonetheless roughly tracks the development of a research project in the social sciences and humanities, respectively. In the first direction, (1) the humanities can help the social sciences identify new directions and scope for their inquiry; (2) provide conceptual clarity for constructs that the social sciences elect to study; and (3) enrich & clarify the interpretation of empirical results. Moving in the opposite direction, the social sciences can help (4) furnish new data for humanistic reflection; (5) confirm (or challenge) claims from the humanities; and (6) develop and assess interventions for achieving the goods highlighted by humanistic inquiry.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference108 articles.
1. Adams R (2006) A theory of virtue: excellence in being for the good. Oxford University, New York
2. Alfano M (2014) Character as moral fiction. Cambridge University, New York
3. Alfano M (2016) Moral psychology: an introduction. Polity, Boston
4. Annas J (1993) The morality of happiness. Oxford University Press, New York
5. Snow N (ed.) (2014) Cultivating virtue: perspectives from philosophy, theology, and psychology. Oxford University Press, New York
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献