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Evidence-based social science: why, what, and future implications

Social Work

Evidence-based social science: why, what, and future implications

W. Yang

This paper by Wendeng Yang delves into the effectiveness of social science practices compared to natural sciences, critiquing the over-reliance on 'practical wisdom.' It advocates for an evidence-based approach, akin to evidence-based medicine, exploring its core characteristics and future challenges.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Mankind has always relied on "practical wisdom" in the sense of Aristotle to change people and society. However, practical wisdom is difficult to accumulate and pass on from generation to generation. Therefore, although "natural engineering" that is consistent with "natural technology" can be used effectively to transform the natural world, using "practical wisdom" to change people and society remains difficult. Solving this dilemma requires an effective means to separate "social science", "social technology", and "social engineering" to accumulate and inherit "knowledge of changing people and society" similar to other types of scientific knowledge. Today, the prevailing evidence-based social science is the opposition and unity of laws of nature and free will, truth-seeking and goodness-pursuing, individual wisdom and collective wisdom, autonomy and supervision, the universal and the special in practice. The emergence of this concept allows for the possibility to enhance the effectiveness of social science practice.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Aug 10, 2024
Authors
Wendeng Yang
Tags
social science
natural sciences
practical wisdom
evidence-based
research integration
challenges
development
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