Ne mark of the turn away from positivism and toward interpretation in the behavioral and social sciences has been a renewed attention to narrative knowing. Many scholars now view physicians and patients, analysts and analysands, fieldworkers and subjects as partners engaged in the distinctively "historic and hermeneutic" activirv of storytelling.
Ne mark of the turn away from positivism and toward interpretation in the behavioral and social sciences has been a renewed attention to narrative knowing. Many scholars now view physicians and patients, analysts and analysands, fieldworkers and subjects as partners engaged in the distinctively "historic and hermeneutic" activirv of storytelling.
Ne mark of the turn away from positivism and toward interpretation in the behavioral and social sciences has been a renewed attention to narrative knowing. Many scholars now view physicians and patients, analysts and analysands, fieldworkers and subjects as partners engaged in the distinctively "historic and hermeneutic" activirv of storytelling.