Talk:Nomothetic and idiographic
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editi thought nomothetic was deductive... "a tendency to generalize" or "deriving laws" is inductive. similarly, i thought idiographic was inductive, not deductive. of course, the whole inductive vs. deductive "binary" is problematic at best, since it ignores its companion retroduction/abduction.
accuracy?
editI am struggling as the dictionary seems to provide a far greater clarity than this article.
- idiographic - Relating to or concerned with discrete or unique facts or events eg "History is an idiographic discipline, studying events that cannot be repeated"
- nomothetic - Of or relating to the study or discovery of general scientific laws.
Is it that the evolution of the terms as decsribed above is at variance with Kant's definitions? Could we clarify between the two? In addition there seems to be a need to relate the article to the other article on nomothetic already on Wiki LookingGlass (talk) 17:57, 1 June 2010 (UTC)
'expert' opinion
editIt would be a mistake to confuse idiographic and nomothetic approaches to research with inductive and deductive logic. Idiographic and nomothetic are two differing ways of looking at research. Idiographic is all about trying to understand the individual person or case. Much history does indeed fall into this category. For example, we might want to know about Hitler in great depth to make sense of what he did. The nomothetic approach would be to look across leaders to find common causation for their actions.
An added twist is that we should take account of data gathering and data analysis as these two key phases could be idiographic or nomothetic even within the same study. For example, imagine a researcher conducted lots of one-to-one interviews to understand each person's job satisfaction in real detail. This would be idiographic data gathering. Then, once all this data had been gathered, the researcher might ask what similarities exist across the various people. This would be nomothetic data analysis. Any and all combinations are possible.
Induction and deduction are more about the way conclusions are drawn. Data gathered and analysed via idiographic or nomothetic approaches to research could be tackled with either inductive or deductive logic.
I cannot comment on Kant as I am not an expert on his work. These comments come from modern usage of the terms idiographic and nomothetic in applied psychology. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.129.138.34 (talk) 14:59, 5 January 2011 (UTC)
Bad Referencing
edit"Davis Millon states that when spotting and diagnosing personality disorders..." There is no such person as Davis Millon. The book he cites was written by Theodore Millon and R.D. Davis Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond — Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.20.26.242 (talk) 18:41, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
Bold style number agreement
editNomothetic and idiographic are terms used by Kantian philosopher Wilhelm Windelband to describe two distinct approaches to knowledge ...
The alternative to separate bold items would be:
Nomothetic and idiographic is a phrase used by Kantian philosopher Wilhelm Windelband to juxtapose two distinct approaches to knowledge ...
Those are the choices as I see it. — MaxEnt 02:50, 7 May 2017 (UTC)