Elementary Theory: 25 Years of Expanding Scope and Increasing Precision☆Authors are ordered first by number of sections contributed and then alphabetically. The first author is solely responsible for errors.
Authors are ordered first by number of sections contributed and then alphabetically. The first author is solely responsible for errors.
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Published:2014
David Willer, Pamela Emanuelson, Michael J. Lovaglia, Brent Simpson, Shane R. Thye, Henry Walker, Mamadi Corra, Steven Gilham, Danielle Lewis, Travis Patton, Yamilette Chacon, Richard Chacon, 2014. "Elementary Theory: 25 Years of Expanding Scope and Increasing Precision☆
Authors are ordered first by number of sections contributed and then alphabetically. The first author is solely responsible for errors.
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Abstract
This exposition explains how Elementary Theory works and how it has been developed over the last two-and-a-half decades. Both increased scope and heightened precision are covered.
Theoretic methodology is explained. Using that method formal models are constructed analogous to empirical events. Those models predict events, design experiments, and guide applications in the field.
There is a widely held belief in sociology that theory becomes more vague and imprecise as its scope broadens. Whereas broader generalizations are more vague than narrower ones, this exposition shows that abstract theory becomes more precise as its scope broadens.
Here implications and limitations are closely connected. Regarding implications, this exposition shows that scientific explanations and predictions are viable today in sociology but only when exact theory is employed. Regarding limitations, the theory and research included in this exposition make clear why the empiricist search for regularities that dominates sociological research is so very limited in its results.
This exposition demonstrates that theory is the method of all the sciences and in particular the science of sociology.
