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Relevant Developments (relevant + development)
Selected AbstractsOn the role of statistics in climate researchINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2004Francis W. Zwiers Abstract We review the role of statistical analysis in the climate sciences. Special emphasis is given to attempts to construct dynamical knowledge from limited observational evidence, and to the ongoing task of drawing detailed and reliable information on the state, and change, of climate that is needed, for example, for short-term and seasonal forecasting. We conclude with recommendations of how to improve the practice of statistical analysis in the climate sciences by drawing more efficiently on relevant developments in statistical mathematics. Copyright © 2004 Environment Canada. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Becoming Undisciplined: Toward the Supradisciplinary Study of SecurityINTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 1 2005J. Marshall Beier In recent years we have seen increasing reflection among scholars of security studies regarding the boundaries of their field and the range of its appropriate subject matter. At the same time, scholars elsewhere in the academy have been developing their own approaches to issues of security. These various pockets of work have been undertaken in nearly complete isolation from one another and with little apparent awareness of relevant developments in the other fields. In this essay, we advance the claim that security cannot be satisfactorily theorized within the confines of disciplinary boundaries,any disciplinary boundaries. The challenge thus becomes how to develop what might be termed a "supradisciplinary" approach to the study of security that will allow us to think and engage our subject matter across a range of discourses without giving rise to an interdisciplinary hybrid or sui generis discipline. [source] Précis of ,An Abductive Theory of Scientific Method'JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 9 2008Brian D. HaigArticle first published online: 9 JUL 200 Abstract This short article is a précis of the author's (2005a) abductive theory of scientific method. This theory of method assembles a complex of specific strategies and methods of relevance to psychology that are employed in the detection of empirical phenomena and the subsequent construction of explanatory theories. A characterization of the nature of phenomena is given, and the process of their detection is briefly described in terms of a multistage model of data analysis. The construction of explanatory theories is shown to involve their generation through abductive, or explanatory, reasoning, their development through analogical modeling, and their fuller appraisal in terms of judgments of the best of competing explanations. The nature and limits of this theory of method are discussed in the light of relevant developments in scientific methodology. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol 64:1,4, 2008. [source] Between Peirce (1878) and James (1898): G. Stanley Hall, the origins of pragmatism, and the history of psychologyJOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, Issue 1 2009David E. Leary This article focuses on the 20-year gap between Charles S. Peirce's classic proposal of pragmatism in 1877,1878 and William James's equally classic call for pragmatism in 1898. It fills the gap by reviewing relevant developments in the work of Peirce and James and by introducing G. Stanley Hall, for the first time, as a figure in the history of pragmatism. In treating Hall and pragmatism, the article reveals a previously unnoted relation between the early history of pragmatism and the early history of the "new psychology" that Hall helped to pioneer. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] |