EXPLANATION IN GEOGRAPHY

David Harvey

EXPLANATION IN GEOGRAPHY

David Harvey

-15%1186
MRP: ₹1395
  • ISBN 9788170337850
  • Publication Year 2007
  • Pages 542
  • Binding Hardback
  • Sale Territory India Only

About the Book

“Explanation in Geography, ” the first book by David Harvey, is still the major text used on scientific methodology in geography. It is about the ways in which geographical understanding and knowledge can be acquired and the standards of rational argument and interference that are necessary to ensure that this process is reasonable. The author has sought to show that we can formulate criteria to judge whether or not an argument is sound, a technique properly used, or an explanation reasonable. The book also provides a series of spring-boards for future methodological analysis and some rough and ready guidelines for the conduct of empirical research in geography.

Geographers, who can obtain from reading this book only a small fraction of understanding and insight, will be benefited materially.


Contents

Philosophy, Methodology and EXPLANATION

1.       Philosophy and Methodology in Geography

2.       The Meaning of Explanation

THE METHODOLOGICAL BACKGROUND AND EXPLANATION IN GEOGRAPHY

3.       Geography and Science: The Methodological Setting

4.       Scientific Explanation: The Model of Natural Science

5.       Problems of Explanation in the Social Sciences and History

6.       Explanation in Geography: Some General Problems

THE ROLE OF THEORIES, LAWS AND MODELS IN EXPLANATION IN GEOGRAPHY

7.       Theories

8.       Hypotheses and Laws

9.       Laws and Theories in Geography

10.     Models

11.     Models in Geography

12.     Theories, Laws and Models in Geographic Explanation: A Concluding Statement

MODEL LANGUAGES FOR GEOGRAPHIC EXPLANATION

13.     Mathematics: The Language of Science

14.     Geometry: The Language of Spatial Form

15.     Probability Theory: The Language of Chance

MODELS FOR DESCRIPTION IN GEOGRAPHY

16.     Observation

17.     Observation Models: Definition and Measurement

18.     Classification

19.     Data Collection and Representation in Geography

MODELS FOR EXPLANATION IN GEOGRAPHY

20.     Cause-and-Effect Models

21.     Temporal Modes of Explanation in Geography

22.     Functional Explanation

23.     Systems

24.     Explanation in Geography: A Concluding Comment 


About the Author / Editor

David Harvey is a leading theorist in the field of urban studies and “one of the most influential geographers of the later 20th century” according to “Library Journal”. His reflections on the importance of space and place (and more recently ‘nature’) have attracted considerable attention across the humanities and social sciences. Among Harvey’s highly influential books are “Social Justice and the City” (1973); “Limits to Capital” (1982); “The Urbanization of Capital” (1985); “The Condition of Postmodernity” (1989); “Justice, Nature, and the Geography of Difference” (1996); “Spaces of Hope” (2000); and “Spaces of Capital: Towards a Critical Geography” (2001).

Harvey was formerly a Professor at Johns Hopkins, a Miliband Fellow at the London School of Economics, and Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography at Oxford University. Currently, he is Graduate Center faculty member at The City University of New York.


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