|
|
|
|
|
by stewbrew
2102 days ago
|
|
There is a Springer "Journal of Computational Social Science". That could be a source of inspiration. CS/ML in Social Sciences gets interesting where a great amount of routine data is generated -- i.e. areas close to public administration. Why did you subscribe in the program when you're not interested in the computational aspect? Or are you more interested in some kind of grand social theory/philosophy of computation? If you read German, Armin Nassehi "recently" published "Muster. Theorie der digitalen Gesellschaft" (Pattern. Therory of a digital society). He is not the first but I find his stance interesting - based on several interviews, I haven't read the book though. Many sociologists deal with the Internet & AI but I find those works less inspiring because they usually lack an adequate technical understanding. To me it often feels like bushmen theorizing about empty coca cola bottles (you probably don't know the movie?). |
|