Reinventing Evidence in Social Inquiry overthrows the techniques for
coding evidence that pervade the modern social sciences. Natural
scientists produce facts and humanists interpret meanings. But what
happens when social scientists who study culture try to forge a hybrid
between the two? On the surface, they classify cultural meanings to
produce facts or variables. With stunning case examples, this book
dismantles the facts as circular inventions with no existence outside
the false rituals in which they are spun. Social investigators must
reclaim their roots with more direct, testable methods for recognizing
patterns in human testimony.