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What is Structuralist Theories

Handbook of Research on Culturally-Aware Information Technology: Perspectives and Models
This term denotes theories that explain social processes according to underlying structures that cannot be reduced to the underlying level of individual interactions. Social structure is governed by rules and laws of its own. Society is regarded as an emergent level of reality.
Published in Chapter:
An Epistemological Gap in Simulation Technologies and the Science of Society
Martin Neumann (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-883-8.ch006
Abstract
This chapter addresses methodological issues in relation to simulation technologies, using the example of archaeological modeling. While the top-down architecture of system dynamics became popular in the 1970s, the bottom-up approach of agent-based modeling actually predominates in social simulation. This paper demonstrates that the gap in sociological theory between interactionalist and structuralist theories can be discerned in the methodological framework. The theoretical implications associated with the choice of a simulation methodology are examined by contrasting agent-based and equation-based models in detail. This example makes evident how intimately issues of methodology are interwoven with epistemological and ontological questions. However, agent-based modeling aims precisely to overcome this dichotomy with the notion of emergence. The chapter therefore concludes with an overview of requirements for a technology of emergence.
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