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Social Mechanisms, Causal Inference, and the Policy Relevance of Social Scienceby: Erik Weber
Philosophy of the Social Sciences In Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Vol. 37, No. 3. (1 September 2007), pp. 348-359.
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AbstractThe paper has two aims. First, to show that we need social mechanisms to establish the policy relevance of causal claims, even if it is possible to build a good argument for those claims without knowledge of mechanisms. Second, to show that although social scientists can, in principle, do without social mechanisms when they argue for causal claims, in reality scientific practice contexts where they do not need mechanisms are very rare. 10.1177/0048393107303814
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