Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations: Taking on the Newly Configured Reductionist Challenge to Sociology
Author: Troy Duster
Translator: Ivan Evtimov
Abstract
Sociology faces three important interrelated challenges in the
coming decades. The first will be the increasing authority of
reductionist science for which partial evidence is found in the
strikingly imbalanced allocation of research funding for "causes"
of wide-ranging problems-from disparities in health and educational
achievement to explanations of alcoholism and violence. The second
is the attendant expansion of databases on markers and processes
"inside the body." Directly but inversely related is the third
challenge: new evidence that the release of already collected data
sets is blocked and data collection on social and economic forces
is reduced. These challenges can be confronted and addressed
directly if sociologists emulate an earlier generation of
sociological researchers and turn greater attention to an analysis
of data collection at the site of reductionist knowledge
production. This includes, for example, close scrutiny of new
computer technologies assisting several DNA identification claims.
It is insufficient to simply assert the arbitrariness of the
"social construction" of these claims. Instead, the architecture of
that construction must be demonstrated. Unless that is done,
competing explanations (from various disciplines) will have far
greater significance on public policy and on the particular
discipline's status with public and private funding sources.
The article is translated and published with special permission
of Troy Duster, Troy Duster Institute for the History of the
Production of Knowledge, 285 Mercer Street, 10th floor, New York
University, New York, NY 10003-6653 (troy.duster@nyu.edu).
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