
Contents
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3.1 What’s your problem? 3.1 What’s your problem?
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3.2 Nine arguments and nine responses 3.2 Nine arguments and nine responses
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(i) Argument from stipulative freedom (i) Argument from stipulative freedom
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Response to (i) Response to (i)
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(ii) Argument from theoretical vocabularies (ii) Argument from theoretical vocabularies
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Response to (ii) Response to (ii)
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(iii) ‘They’ll tell you!’ (iii) ‘They’ll tell you!’
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Response to (iii) Response to (iii)
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(iv) Argument from usefulness (iv) Argument from usefulness
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Response to (iv) Response to (iv)
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(v) Argument from dirty hands (v) Argument from dirty hands
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Response to (v) Response to (v)
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(vi) ‘That’s too static!’ (vi) ‘That’s too static!’
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Response to (vi) Response to (vi)
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(vii) ‘That’s unsophisticated!’ (vii) ‘That’s unsophisticated!’
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Response to (vii) Response to (vii)
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(viii) ‘Leave things alone (nothing should be done)’ (viii) ‘Leave things alone (nothing should be done)’
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Response to (viii) Response to (viii)
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(ix) ‘Leave things alone (nothing can be done)’ (ix) ‘Leave things alone (nothing can be done)’
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Response to (ix) Response to (ix)
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3.3 Envoi 3.3 Envoi
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter discusses consistency in conceptualization and measurement that necessitates carefulness, attentiveness, and skill. The process by which concepts are translated into empirical indices involves an initial imagery of the concept, concept specification, selection of observable indicators, and combination of indicators into indices. The chapter mentions George Lundberg, a leading US sociologist and 1943 president of the American Sociological Society, who maintained that, for physicists, definition and measurement were one and the same thing. The chapter considers electricity and intelligence as good illustrations of Lundberg's viewpoint. It recounts Lundberg and Herbert Blumer's public debate on definitions in sociology at a session of the American Sociological Society devoted to sociological theory.
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