Brown, Steven R. (in press). Subjectivity in the human sciences. Psychological Record.

Abstract: Subjectivity is ubiquitous and implies perspectives that range in scope from the intrapersonal (as in individual musings and daydreams) to the intercultural (as in communication between and among identities) and in sophistication from the inchoate babblings of infants to the theoretical pronouncements of philosophers and mathematicians. Q methodology is a philosophical and conceptual framework that, in tandem with its technical and analytical procedures, provides the basis for a science of subjectivity that is applicable across all humanities and sciences as well as their extensions into public policy. This paper presents the basic principles and procedures of Q methodology (rooted in the fundamentals of factor-analytic developments of the past century) and demonstrates its applicability to a variety of subject-matter domains, including literary interpretation, strategic planning and decision making, scientific creativity, program evaluation, and the intensive analysis of single cases.

Steven R Brown <sbrown@kent.edu> is emeritus professor of Political Science and adjunct instructor, Program in Evaluation and Measurement, Graduate School of Education, Health, and Human Services, Kent State University, Kent, OH (USA).

One thought on “Q Bibliography: Brown on subjectivity in the human sciences

  1. I would love to be able to red the full article please. Is there a link I can follow? I’m not associated with an academic institution but I am a passionate campaigner for Q Methodology.

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