Scholarly method
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The scholarly method or scholarship is the body of
peer reviewed through various methods.[1] The scholarly method includes the subcategories of the scientific method, with which scientists bolster their claims, and the historical method, with which historians verify their claims.[2]
Methods
The
synthesis
.
The
experimental method investigates causal relationships among variables. An experiment is a cornerstone of the empirical approach to acquiring data about the world and is used in both natural sciences and social sciences. An experiment can be used to help solve practical problems and to support or negate theoretical
assumptions.
The scientific method refers to a body of techniques for investigating
reasoning.[3] A scientific method consists of the collection of data through observation and experimentation, and the formulation and testing of hypotheses.[4]
See also
Wikiquote has quotations related to Scholarship.
- Academia
- Academic authorship
- Academic publishing
- Discipline (academia)
- Doctor (title)
- Ethics
- Historical revisionism
- History of scholarship
- Manual of style
- Professor
- Source criticism
- Urtext edition
- Wissenschaft
References
- ^ "Defining Scholarship for the Discipline of Nursing". American Association of Colleges of Nursing. Archived from the original on 2012-02-06. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
- ^
- "Historical Methods". Faculty of History: University of Oxford.
- Andersen, Hanne; Hepburn, Brian (2021). "Scientific Method". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
- ISBN 0-520-08817-4, 974 pages.
- ^ "scientific method". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.