During the 1920s a new generation of American sociologists tried to
make their discipline more objective by adopting the methodology of
the natural sciences. Robert Bannister provides the first
comprehensive account of the emergence of this "objectivism" within
the matrix of the evolutionism of Lester Ward and other founders of
American sociology.
Objectivism meant confining inquiry to the observable externals of
social behavior and quantifying the results. Although objectivism
was a marked departure from the theoretical and reformist sociology
of the prewar years, and caused often-fierce intergenerational
struggle, sociological objectivism had roots deep in prewar
sociology.
Objectivism first surfaced in the work of sociology's "second
generation," the most prominent members of which completed their
graduate work prior to World War I. It gradually took shape in what
may be termed "realist" and "nominalist" variants, the first
represented by Luther Lee Bernard and the second by William F.
Ogburn and F. Stuart Chapin. For Bernard, a scientific sociology
was radical, prescribing absolute standards for social policy. For
Ogburn and Chapin, it was essentially statistical and advisory in
the sense that experts would concern themselves exclusively with
means rather than ends.
Although the objectivists differed among themselves, they together
precipitated battles within the American Sociological Society
during the 1930s that challenged the monopoly of the Chicago
School, paving the way for the informal alliance of Parsonian
theorists and a new generation of quantifiers that dominated the
profession throughout the 1950s. By shedding new light on the
careers of Ward and the other founders and by providing original
accounts of the careers of the leading objectivists, Bannister
presents a unique look at the course of sociology before and after
World War I. He puts theory formation in an institutional,
ideological, and biographical setting, and thus offers an
unparalleled look at the formation of a modern academic
profession.