Foundations of Inquiry

Why Philosophy Matters

Every research study is guided by underlying assumptions about reality, knowledge, and how we come to know.

Ontology

What is the nature of reality? Is it objective or constructed?

Epistemology

What counts as knowledge? How can it be acquired?

Methodology

How do we go about discovering that knowledge?

The Great Divide

Positivism

  • Reality is objective and measurable.
  • Dominated by quantitative research.
  • Seeks universal laws & predictions.
Example: A survey measuring exam scores to statistically test a stress hypothesis.

Interpretivism

  • Reality is socially constructed & subjective.
  • Dominated by qualitative research.
  • Seeks deep understanding of meanings.
Example: In-depth interviews exploring the personal experience of exam anxiety.
POSITIVIST VIEW
INTERPRETIVIST VIEW
Reality Ontology
One single objective reality exists.
Multiple realities shaped by culture & experience.
Knowledge Epistemology
Discovered through detached measurement.
Co-created through dialogue & interpretation.

Methodological Toolkit

Positivist Tools

Surveys, experiments, statistical analysis.

Interpretivist Tools

Open interviews, observations, narratives.

Why This Matters to You

01. Questions

Design

Determines if you ask exploratory "How/Why" questions or confirmatory "To what extent" questions.

02. Methods

Execution

Dictates whether you collect rich narratives or precise numerical data.

03. Insights

Interpretation

Guides whether you aim for generalizable laws or deep, context-specific insight.

Interactive Reflection

Where do you stand?

Use the slider below to explore the spectrum between the two paradigms.

Pure Positivist Pure Interpretivist
Mixed Methods / Pragmatist

"I see value in both numbers and narratives depending on the question."