有人口统计学的原则吗?寻找统一(和霸权)的主题

Q3 Social Sciences
W. Butz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

一个研究领域的基本原则既可以提供内部一致性,也可以提供外部影响。首先,在我们科学学科的背景下,原则可以通过解释学科的各个方面和部分如何结合在一起,以及它们的总和如何大于部分的总和,从而提供连贯性。其次,一个学科的原则可以表明它的观点和发现如何有助于其他学科,甚至更广泛地说,有助于政策分析和民间话语。在科学领域内外输出霸权——这一过程可能比通常的多学科研究更具侵略性,也更不友好——可以唤醒邻近学术领域的新激情。如果有一些人口学的原则已经在我们的领域内反映并提供了一致性,那么这些原则的明确阐明甚至在国外的推广是否有可能增加我们的科学在学术和政策团体中的突出地位,同时丰富其他研究人类行为的方法?人类学、经济学、地理学、心理学和社会学可能会对统一在一套原则下的人口统计学观点、模型和工具的霸权开放。沃尔夫冈·卢茨的整个职业生涯都对科学的哲学和方法论感兴趣,这也是我的主题所在。利用他在历史和哲学方面的深厚学术基础,他最近提出了将科学学科划分为身份科学和干预科学,将因果关系划分为强因果关系和功能因果关系的富有成效的建议(Lutz et al. 2017,17 - 19)。身份科学,通常是人文学科,问的是“我们是谁?”和“我们从哪里来?”干预科学的问题是“社会系统中最重要的变革力量如何发挥作用,从而预测系统的未来演变?”
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are there principles of demography? A search for unifying (and hegemonic) themes
The principles underlying a field of study can provide both internal coherence and external influence. First, in our context of a scientific discipline, principles can lend coherence by explicating how the discipline’s various aspects and pieces fit together, and how their total becomes greater than the sum of the parts. Second, a discipline’s principles can suggest how its perspectives and findings might contribute to other disciplines, and, even more broadly, to policy analysis and civil discourse. The exporting of hegemony across scientific fields and beyond—a process that can be more aggressive and less friendly than the usual multidisciplinary pursuits—can awaken new passions in adjacent academic fields. If there are principles of demography that already reflect and provide coherence within our field, is it then possible that the explicit elucidation or even the promotion of these principles abroad adds to the prominence of our science in the academic and policy communities, while enriching other approaches to studying human behavior? Anthropology, economics, geography, psychology, and sociology might be open to the hegemony of demographic perspectives, models, and tools, as unified under a set of principles. The philosophy and methodology of science, in which my topic modestly sits, has interested Wolfgang Lutz throughout his career. Drawing on his strong academic grounding in history and philosophy, he has recently made the fruitful proposal of partitioning scientific disciplines into identity sciences and intervention sciences, and causality into strong causality and functional causality (Lutz et al. 2017, 17– 19). The identity sciences, which are generally the humanities, ask “Who are we?” and “Where do we come from?” The intervention sciences ask “How do the most important forces of change in a social system function, so as to predict the future evolution of the system?”
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来源期刊
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Social Sciences-Demography
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: In Europe there is currently an increasing public awareness of the importance that demographic trends have in reshaping our societies. Concerns about possible negative consequences of population aging seem to be the major force behind this new interest in demographic research. Demographers have been pointing out the fundamental change in the age composition of European populations and its potentially serious implications for social security schemes for more than two decades but it is only now that the expected retirement of the baby boom generation has come close enough in time to appear on the radar screen of social security planners and political decision makers to be considered a real challenge and not just an academic exercise.
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