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EPISTEMOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH, BIBLIOGRAPHY, image,…
EPISTEMOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
Positivism
It is a philosophy where reality is the only object of knowledge that is considered naturalistic.
Postmodernism
It is a current of thought that seeks to overcome modernity, rejects ideologies of modernism and gives importance to critical theory since they have different ways of appreciating reality.
The results of a quantitative investigation are represented in large samples since they are very reliable and focuses on a numerical reasoning.
Post-positivism
They accept that theories and antecedents can influence what is observed and emphasize quantitative methods.
Look for facts or causes of social phenomena with little attention to the subjective states of individuals.
Interpretivism
Access to reality through social constructions, that is, it acts as the cause of interpretive processes.
Subjectivism
It is a philosophical doctrine that indicates that knowledge depends on the individual, which at first glance seems to a subject a class of objective judgments. (HG. E, 2010, p.1)
Criticalism
Form of thought that questions itself and that considers not only the limits and possibilities of reason, but also the human and historical reality of a subject that constitutes a "we". (Vignale. S, 2013, p.1)
Study of nature through empirical and formal procedures (Sánchez. F, 2019, p.3)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Sánchez. F, Epistemic foundations of qualitative and quantitative research: Consensus and dissent, June (2019). Recovered from:
http://www.scielo.org.pe/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2223-25162019000100008
HG. E, What is subjectivism in philosophy?, January (2010). Recoverd from:
https://www.microfilosofia.com/2011/10/que-es-en-filosofia-el-subjetivismo.html
Vignale. S, Critical Philosophy and Utopian Function in Arturo Roig, August (2013). Recovered from:
https://ri.conicet.gov.ar/handle/11336/6303