I - EXPLANATION AND MECHANISMS
Summary
This book relies on a specific view about explanation in the social sciences. Although not primarily a work of philosophy of social science, it draws upon and advocates certain methodological ideas about how to explain social phenomena. In the first three chapters, these ideas are set out explicitly. In the rest of the book they mostly form part of the implicit background, although from time to time, notably in Chapters 14 through 17 and in the Conclusion, they return to the center of the stage.
I argue that all explanation is causal. To explain a phenomenon (an explanandum) is to cite an earlier phenomenon (the explanans) that caused it. When advocating causal explanation, I do not intend to exclude the possibility of intentional explanation of behavior. Intentions can serve as causes. A particular variety of intentional explanation is rational-choice explanation, which will be extensively discussed in later chapters. Many intentional explanations, however, rest on the assumption that agents are, in one way or another, irrational. In itself, irrationality is just a negative or residual idea, everything that is not rational. For the idea to have any explanatory purchase, we need to appeal to specific forms of irrationality with specific implications for behavior. In Chapter 12, for instance, I enumerate and illustrate eleven mechanisms that can generate irrational behavior.
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- Explaining Social BehaviorMore Nuts and Bolts for the Social Sciences, pp. 7 - 8Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007