achieved end result. Multiple Methods and Choice of Methods Since there are multiple truths and multiple perspectives in sociology, it is hardly surprising that there are also multiple methods. There is no single unique road to sociological truth. Of course, different methods are more or less suited to tackle different types of research questions.
Moreover, every method has its own strengths and weaknesses. It is thus futile to argue about the superiority or inferiority of different methods. It is more important to ask if the method chosen is the appropriate one for answering the question that is being asked. For example, if one is interested in finding out whether most Indian families are still ‘joint families’, then a census or survey is the best method.
However, if one wishes to compare the status of women in joint and nuclear families, then interviews, case studies or participant observation may all be appropriate methods. There are different ways of classifying or categorising various methods commonly used by sociologists. It is conventional, for example, to distinguish between quantitative and qualitative methods: the former deals in countable or measurable variables (proportions, averages, and the like) while the latter deals with more abstract and hard to measure phenomena like attitudes, emotions and so on. A related distinction is between methods that study observable behaviour and those that study non-observable meanings, values and other interpretational things.
Another way of classifying methods is to distinguish the ones that rely on ‘secondary’ or already existing data (in the form of documents or other records and artefacts) from those that are designed to produce fresh or ‘primary’ data. Thus historical methods typically rely on secondary material found in archives, while interviews generate primary data, and so on. Yet another way of categorisation is to separate ‘micro’ from ‘macro’ methods. The former are designed to work in small intimate settings usually with a single researcher; thus the interview and participant observation are thought of as micro methods.
Macro methods are those that are able to tackle large scale research involving large numbers of respondents and investigators. Survey research is