1st Edition

Matters of Fact (RLE Social Theory) A Sociological Inquiry

By Stanley Raffel Copyright 1979
    134 Pages
    by Routledge

    134 Pages
    by Routledge

    Facts may seem to be independent, but in this study Stanley Raffle looks at them as expressions of commitment. Medical records, he believes, furnish a principal example of the actively oriented character of the factual commitment, and he draws on his experience of research among the records of a large modern hospital to demonstrate this. He describes how records are produced and reorganized as records, and discusses the grounds which provide for all the features of the records. He looks at the act of ‘observation’ in many apparently and concretely different places, and analyses the activity of noticing, viewing, recording a spectacle, where what is observed supposedly remains untouched by the observing. Dr Raffel goes on to show that observation, events, records and criteria of assessment such as reliability and completeness lose their status as unexplicated verities and become, instead, decisive and consequential courses of action. He points out, too, that the Socratic dialogues exemplify an orientation to commitment that even medical records, paradoxically, require if they are to be the matters of fact that they are.

    Part 1. The Grounds of the Activity of Recording  1.1. Introduction  1.2. Observations and Records  1.3. Records and Events  Part 2. Implications of the Grounds of Records for the Uses of Records  2.1. Reliability  2.2. Completeness

    Biography

    Raffel, Stanley