Understanding Research Philosophy Notes 2019
Understanding Research Philosophy Notes 2019
Understanding Research Philosophy Notes 2019
Learning outcomes/objectives
By the end of this chapter you should be able to:
• define the key terms Ontology, Epistemology And Axiology and explain their relevance to
business research;
• explain the relevance for business research of philosophical perspectives such as positivism,
realism, pragmatism and interpretivism;
• understand the main research paradigms which are significant for business research;
• distinguish between main research approaches: deductive and inductive;
• state your own epistemological, ontological and axiological positions.
Why ?; Guba and Lincoln ,1994 argue that questions of research methods are of secondary
importance to questions of which paradigm is applicable to your research study. They note:
both qualitative and quantitative methods may be used appropriately with any research
paradigm. Questions of method are secondary to questions of paradigm, which we define as
the basic belief system or world view that guides the investigation, not only in choices of
method but in ontologically and epistemologically fundamental ways.
RESEARCH PHILOSOPHY. This over-arching term relates to the development of knowledge and
the nature of that knowledge.
At first reading this sounds rather profound. But the point is that this is precisely what you are
doing when embarking on research – developing knowledge in a particular field.
The knowledge development you are embarking upon may not be as dramatic as a new theory
of human motivation.
But even if the purpose has the relatively modest ambition of answering a specific problem in
RESEARCH ONION
THE adopted PHILOSOPHY will be influenced by: practical considerations, but more by the
particular way one views the relationship between the knowledge and the way it is developed.
How well a researcher is able to reflect on their philosophical choices to defend the alternatives
adopted
1. Ontology: What assumptions do we make about the way in which the world works?
Ontology is concerned with nature of reality. This raises questions of the assumptions
researchers have about the way the world operates and the commitment held to particular
views. The two aspects of ontology we describe here will both have their devotees among
business and management researchers. In addition, both are likely to be accepted as producing
valid knowledge by many researchers.
objectivism. This portrays the position that social entities exist in reality external to social
actors concerned with their existence.
You may argue that management is an objective entity and decide to adopt an objectivist
stance to the study of particular aspects of management in a specific organisation. In order to
substantiate your view you would say that the managers in your organisation have job
descriptions which prescribe their duties, there are operating procedures to which they are
supposed to adhere, they are part of a formal structure which locates them in a hierarchy with
people reporting to them and they in turn report to more senior managers. This view
emphasises the structural aspects of management and assumes that management is similar in
all organisations. Aspects of the structure in which management operates may differ but the
essence of the function is very much the same in all organisations.
subjectivism, holds that social phenomena are created from the perceptions and consequent
actions of those social actors concerned with their existence.
Subjectivism: understanding the meanings that individuals attach to social phenomena
The subjectivist view is that social phenomena are created from the perceptions and
consequent actions of social actors. This is a continual process in that through the
process of social interaction these social phenomena are in a constant state of change.
Remenyi et al. (1998:35) stress the necessity to study ‘the details of the situation to
understand the reality or perhaps a reality working behind them’. This is often associated
with the term constructionism, or social constructionism. This follows from the interpretivist
philosophy that it is necessary to explore the subjective meanings motivating the
actions of social actors in order for the researcher to be able to understand these actions.
Social constructionism views reality as being socially constructed. Social actors, such as
the customers you may plan to study in your organisation, may place many different
interpretations on the situations in which they find themselves. So individual customers
will perceive different situations in varying ways as a consequence of their own view of
the world. These different interpretations are likely to affect their actions and the nature
of their social interaction with others. In this sense, the customers you are studying not
only interact with their environment, they also seek to make sense of it through their
interpretation of events and the meanings that they draw from these events. In turn their
own actions may be seen by others as being meaningful in the context of these socially
constructed interpretations and meanings.
Therefore, in the case of the customers you are
studying, it is your role as the researcher to seek to understand the subjective reality of
the customers in order to be able to make sense of and understand their motives, actions
and intentions in a way that is meaningful
2.Pragmatism: do you have to adopt one position?
It is unavoidable that the debate on ontology and epistemology which follows has a competitive
Ring.
Pragmatism: do you have to adopt one position? ontology and epistemology are competitive
ring or opposing sides. The debate is often framed in terms of a choice between either the
positivist or the interpretivist research philosophy. Even if you accept the Guba &Lincoln, (1994)
argument noted earlier, in which questions of method are secondary to questions of
epistemology, ontology and axiology, you would still be excused for thinking that choosing
between one position and the other is somewhat unrealistic in practice. If this is your view then
you would be adopting the position of the pragmatist.
Pragmatism argues that the most important determinant of the epistemology, ontology and
axiology you adopt is the research question – one may be more appropriate than the other for
answering particular questions. Moreover, if the research question does not suggest
unambiguously that either a positivist or interpretivist philosophy is adopted, this confirms the
pragmatist’s view that it is perfectly possible to work with variations in your epistemology,
ontology and axiology.
This confirms that mixed methods, both qualitative and quantitative, are possible, and possibly
highly appropriate, within one study. Other authors Tashakkori and Teddlie (1998) suggest that
it is more appropriate for the researcher in a particular study to think of the philosophy
adopted as a continuum rather than opposite positions. During research the knower and the
known must be interactive, while at others, one may more easily stand apart from what one is
Studying’ Tashakkori and Teddlie (1998) contend that pragmatism is intuitively appealing,
largely because it avoids the researcher engaging in what they conceptualize as truth and
reality. In their view you should ‘study what interests you and is of value to you, study in the
different ways in which you deem appropriate, and use the results in ways that can bring about
positive consequences within your value system’
Epistemology concerns what constitutes acceptable knowledge in a field of study. The
most important distinction is one hinted at the start of Section 4.2 in our example of two
researchers’ views of what they consider important in the study of the manufacturing
process. The researcher (the ‘resources’ researcher) who considers data on resources
needed is likely to be more akin to the position of the natural scientist. This may be the
position of the operations management specialist who is comfortable with the collection
and analysis of ‘facts’. For that researcher, reality is represented by objects that are considered
to be ‘real’, such as computers, trucks and machines. These objects have a separate
existence to that of the researcher and for that reason, this researcher would argue that the
data collected are far less open to bias and therefore more ‘objective’. The ‘resources’
researcher would place much less authority on the data collected by the ‘feelings’
researcher, who is concerned with the feelings and attitudes of the workers towards their
managers in that same manufacturing process. The ‘resources’ researcher would view the
objects studied by the ‘feelings’ researcher – feelings and attitudes – as social phenomena
which have no external reality. They cannot be seen, measured and modified like computers,
trucks and machines. You may argue, of course, that human feelings can be, and frequently
are, measured. Indeed, the ‘resources’ researcher may place more authority on such
data were it to be presented in the form of a table of statistical data. This would lend the
data more objectivity in the view of the ‘resources’ researcher. But this raises the question
of whether those data presented in statistical form are any more deserving of authority than
those presented in a narrative, which may be the choice of the ‘feelings’ researcher. The
‘resources’ researcher is embracing what is called the positivist philosophy to the
philosophy. We deal with both in this sub-section on epistemology, as well as the stance
Realism is another philosophical position which relates to scientific enquiry. The essence
of realism is that what the senses show us as reality is the truth: that objects have an existence
independent of the human mind. The philosophy of realism is that there is a reality
quite independent of the mind. In this sense, realism is opposed to idealism, the theory
that only the mind and its contents exist. Realism is a branch of epistemology which is
i.Direct realism says that what you see is what you get: what we experience through our senses
portrays the world accurately
ii. Critical realists argue that what we experienceare sensations, the images of the things in the
real world, not the things directly. Critical realists point out how often our senses deceive us.
between humans in our role as social actors. This emphasises the difference between
conducting research among people rather than objects such as trucks and computers
Axiology is a branch of philosophy that studies judgements about value. Although this may
include values we posess in the fields of aesthetics and ethics, it is the process of social enquiry
with which we are concerned here. The role that your own values play in all stages of the
research process is of great importance if you wish your research results to be credible.
Heron (1996) argues that our values are the guiding reason of all human action. He
further argues that researchers demonstrate axiological skill by being able to articulate
their values as a basis for making judgements about what research they are conducting
and how they go about doing it. After all, at all stages in the research process you will be
demonstrating your values. Choosing one topic rather than another suggests that you think
one of the topics is more important. Your choice of philosophical approach is a reflection
of your values, as is your choice of data collection techniques. For example, to conduct a
study where you place great importance on data collected through interview work suggests
that you value personal interaction with your respondents more highly than their
Interpretation, validation
RESEARCH PARADIGMS:
The definition we use here is that a paradigm is a way of examining social phenomena from
which particular understandings of these phenomena can be gained and explanations
attempted.
There are four paradigms: functionalist; interpretive; radical humanist; and radical structuralist.
Radical change
Regulation
The Figure above shows that the four paradigms are arranged to correspond to four
conceptual dimensions: Radical Change and Regulation and Subjectivist and Objectivist. The
latter two terms are familiar to you from our discussion of ontology in the previous section.
In relation to business and management, radical change relates to a judgement about the way
organisational affairs should be conducted and suggests ways in which these affairs may be
conducted in order to make fundamental changes to enhance normal order.. In short, the
radical change dimension adopts a critical perspective on organisational life.
The regulatory perspective is less judgemental and critical. Regulation seeks to explain the way
in which organisational affairs are regulated and offer suggestions as to how they may be
improved within the framework of practices at present.
The radical change dimension approaches organisational problems from the viewpoint of
overturning the existing state of affairs;
The regulatory dimension seeks to work within the existing state of affairs. Burrell and Morgan
(1982).
➢ To help researchers clarify their assumptions about their view of the nature of science
and society;
➢ To offer a useful way of understanding the way in which other researchers approach
their work;
➢ To help researchers plot their own route through their research;
➢ To understand where it is possible to go and where they are going.
In the bottom right corner of the quadrant is the functionalist paradigm. This is located on the
objectivist and regulatory dimensions. Objectivism is the ontological position you are likely to
adopt if you are operating with this paradigm. It is regulatory in that you will probably be more
concerned with a rational explanation of why a particular organisational problem is occurring
and developing a set of recommendations set within the current structure of the organisation’s
current management. This is the paradigm within which most business and management
research operates.
Burrell and Morgan (1982) note that it is often problem-oriented in approach, concerned to
provide practical solutions to practical problems. The key assumption you would be making
here is that organisations are rational entities, in which rational explanations offer solutions to
rational problems.
Contained in the bottom left corner of the quadrant is the interpretive paradigm. The
philosophical position to which this refers (interpretivism) is the way we as humans attempt to
make sense of the world around us. The concern you would have working within this paradigm
would be to understand the fundamental meanings attached to organisational life. Most likely
the principal concern you have here is discovering irrationalities.
Burrell and Morgan (1982) note that everyday life is accorded the status of a miraculous
achievement. The concern here would not be to achieve change in the order of things, but to
understand and explain what is going on.
In the top left corner the Radical Humanist paradigm is located within the subjectivist and
radical change dimensions. The radical change dimension adopts a critical perspective on
organisational life. As such, working within this paradigm you would be concerned with
changing the status quo, According to Burrell and Morgan’s (1979) ‘to articulate ways in
which humans can transcend the spiritual bonds and fetters which tie them into existing social
patterns and thus realise their full potential’.
The ontological perspective you would adopt here, like the the interpretive paradigm, would
be subjectivist.
Finally, in the top right corner of the quadrant is the Radical Structuralist paradigm. Here your
concern would be to approach your research with a view to achieving fundamental change. This
is based upon an analysis of such organisational phenomena e.g power relationships and
patterns of conflict.
The radical structuralist paradigm is involved with structural patterns with work organisations
such as hierarchies and reporting relationships and the extent to which these may produce
dysfunctionalities. It adopts an objectivist perspective because it is concerned with objective
entities, unlike the radical humanist ontology which attempts to understand the meanings of
social phenomena from the subjective perspective of participating social actors.
RESEARCH APPROACHES
That theory may or may not be made explicit in the design of the research, although it will
usually be made explicit in your presentation of the findings and conclusions. The extent to
which you are clear about the theory at the beginning of your research raises an important
question concerning the design of your research project.
This is whether your research should use the deductive approach, in which you develop a
theory and hypothesis (or hypothesis) and design a research strategy to test the hypothesis, or
the inductive approach, in which you would collect data and develop theory as a result of your
data analysis.
Deduction owes much to what we would think of as scientific research. It involves the
development of a theory that is subjected to a rigorous test. As such, it is the dominant
research approach in the natural sciences, where laws present the basis of explanation, allow
the anticipation of phenomena, predict their occurrence and therefore permit them to be
controlled (Collis and Hussey 2003).
Robson (2002) lists five sequential stages through which deductive research will progress:
1 deducing a hypothesis (a testable proposition about the relationship between two or more
concepts or variables) from the theory;
2 expressing the hypothesis in operational terms (that is, indicating exactly how the concepts or
variables are to be measured), which propose a relationship between two specific concepts or
variables;
4 examining the specific outcome of the inquiry (it will either tend to confirm the theory or
indicate the need for its modification);
5 if necessary, modifying the theory in the light of the findings. An attempt is then made to
verify the revised theory by going back to the first step and repeating the whole cycle.
Deduction possesses several important characteristics. First, there is the search to explain
causal relationships between variables. E.g establishing the reasons for high employee
absenteeism in retail store. After studying absence patterns it occurs to you that there seems to
be a relationship between absence, the age of workers and length of service. Consequently, you
develop a hypothesis that states that absenteeism is more likely to be prevalent among
younger workers who have worked for the organisation for a relatively short period of time.
To test this hypothesis you utilize another characteristic, the collection of quantitative data.
deductive approach can also employ qualitative data. It may be that there are important
differences in the way work is arranged in different stores: therefore you would need to employ
a further important characteristic of deduction approach,
controls to allow the testing of hypotheses. These controls would help to ensure that any
change in absenteeism was a function of worker age and length of service rather than any other
aspect of the store, e.g the way in which people were managed. The research would use a
highly structured methodology to facilitate replication (Gill and Johnson 2002), an important
issue to ensure reliability.
In order to pursue the principle of scientific rigour, deduction dictates that the researcher
should be independent of what is being observed. This is easy in our example because it
involves only the collection of absence data. It is also unproblematic if a postal questionnaire is
being administered, although high level of objectivity but, the element of subjectivity in the
choice of questions and the way these are phrased may be encountered.
The purpose here would be to get a feel of what was going on, so as to understand better the
nature of the problem. Your task then would be to make sense of the interview data you had
collected by analysing those data. The result of this analysis would be the formulation of a
theory. This may be that there is a relationship between absence and relatively short periods of
employment.
Alternatively, you may discover that there are other competing reasons for absence that may
or may not be related to worker age or length of service. You may end up with the same theory,
but you would have gone about the production of that theory using an inductive approach:
theory would follow data rather than vice versa as with deduction.
Followers of induction would also criticise deduction because of its tendency to construct a
rigid methodology that does not permit alternative explanations of what is going on. In that
sense, there is an air of finality about the choice of theory and definition of the hypothesis.
Alternative theories may be suggested by deduction.
Research using an inductive approach is likely to be particularly concerned with the context in
which such events were taking place. Therefore, the study of a small sample of subjects might
be more appropriate than a large number as with the deductive approach. As can be seen in
Chapter 10, researchers in this tradition are more likely to work with qualitative data and to use
a variety of methods to collect these data in order to establish different views of phenomena
(Easterby-Smith et al. 2008). Why is the choice that I make about my research approach
important? Easterby-Smith et al. (2008) suggest three reasons.
First, it enables you to take a more informed decision about your research design , which is
more than just the techniques by which data are collected and procedures by which they are
analysed. It is the overall configuration of a piece of research involving questions about what
kind of evidence is gathered and from where, and how such evidence is interpreted in order to
provide good answers to your initial research question.
Second, it will help you to think about those research strategies and choices that will work for
you and, crucially, those that will not. For example, if you are particularly interested in
understanding why something is happening, rather than being able to describe what is
happening, it may be more appropriate to undertake your research inductively rather than
deductively.
Third, Easterby-Smith et al. (2008) argue that knowledge of the different research traditions
enables you to adapt your research design to cater for constraints. These may be practical,
involving, say, limited access to data, or they may arise from a lack of prior knowledge of the
subject. You simply may not be in a position to frame a hypothesis because you have
insufficient understanding of the topic to do this.
So far we have conveyed the impression that there are rigid divisions between deduction and
induction. This would be misleading. It may be often advantageous to do so. Creswell (2018)
suggests a number of practical criteria. Perhaps the most important of these are the emphasis
of the research and the nature of the research topic
. A topic on which there is a wealth of literature from which you can define a theoretical
framework and a hypothesis lends itself more readily to deduction. With research into a topic
that is new, is exciting much debate, and on which there is little existing literature, it may be
more appropriate to work inductively by generating data and analysing and reflecting upon
what theoretical themes the data are suggesting.
The time you have available will be an issue. Deductive research can be quicker to complete,
albeit that time must be devoted to setting up the study prior to data collection and analysis.
Data collection is often based on ‘one take’. It is normally possible to predict the time schedules
accurately.
Inductive research can be much more protracted. Often the ideas, based on a much longer
period of data collection and analysis, have to emerge gradually. This leads to another
important consideration, the extent to which you are prepared to indulge in risk.
Deduction can be a lower-risk strategy, albeit that there are risks, such as the non-return of
questionnaires.
With induction you have constantly to live with the fear that no useful data patterns and theory
will emerge.
Finally, there is the question of audience. In our experience, most managers are familiar with
deduction and much more likely to put faith in the conclusions emanating from this approach.
You may also wish to consider the preferences of the person marking your research report. We
all have our preferences about the approach to adopt. These may be determined the needs,by
report markers , preferences and ideas,interests
➢ a highly structured
approach
➢ researcher independence
of what is being researched