There are several stances you can take, aside from pragmatism, such as multiple paradigms and the dialectical stance. I personally think that pragmatism goes best with mixed methods. As a pragmatist, you prefer action to philosophy and are concerned with choosing the most appropriate methods to answer your research questions, and you accept that reality can be multiple of singular. The proof is in the pudding with pragmatism, meaning that if you research has the desired effect and benefits then your methodological approach is justified - known as functional justification. The constructivist paradigm is inductive, positivism is deductive but pragmatism is adductive combining both the processes of induction and deduction - sorry if that all sounds a bit garbled.
wow you all know your stuff! (want to write a methods chapter???)
I *think* I'm a pragmatist then (up) (will obviously read more on it!)
I reckon I can get away with it because my research is VERY applied (and therefore can justify using mixed methods) so it sounds about right.
Its certainly interesting reading the articles posted here.
I'm following a mixed method approach which involves a quantitative and qualitative study so that I can obtain both breadth and depth in my analysis......it's good to know that there is significant theoretical backing for this approach. I think I've been very lucky in coming up with my approach without any proper investigation into what might have been right, I just thought it was the way to go when I began without actually thinking about it in this way.
ok I am confused and have a stupid question.
What is the difference between epistemology and a philosophical stance? or are they the same thing??
haha, I already had that word doc after lots of searching this morning! thanks Ady.
So basically I refuse to get bogged down in all this - I'm just going to briefly discuss post positivism, constructivism and then talk about my mixed methods stuff and pragmatism.
Now the real question is are they (positivism etc. ) 'epistemologies' (can't spell it) or are they something else (e.g. ontology, theories, methods ARGH!)
======= Date Modified 22 Feb 2011 12:18:28 =======
to clarify I basically want to know if this bit I've written is right or wrong
"The approaches of examining XYZ have been polarised by their epistemological stance. XX theories have adhered to a post-positivist perspective, whilst those emerging from disciplines, other than psychology, have adopted a constructivist or advocacy/participatory approach"
this is a very rough draft - so please don't go crazy over grammar or anything, I just want to know if I'm using the term "epistemoligical" right
then I can get on with my life!
Thanks Ady - In our area this whole thing doesn't seem to crop up much, so I'm hoping the mere fact that I've 'tipped my hat' towards it means I get a tick in that box, if you see what I mean.
8-)
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