Learn Before
Case Study

Diagnose which of the student's two questions is a non-empirical question, and justify your decision using the defining characteristics of non-empirical inquiries.

Case context: A student in a research methods class proposes two research questions for their final project. Question 1 is: 'Does viewing violent television increase aggressive behaviors in children?' Question 2 is: 'Is it morally wrong for television networks to broadcast violent shows during hours when children might be watching?'

Question: Diagnose which of the student's two questions is a non-empirical question, and justify your decision using the defining characteristics of non-empirical inquiries.

Sample answer: Question 2 is a non-empirical question. It asks whether a behavior is 'morally wrong,' which is a subjective value judgment. As a result, it asks how the world ought to be rather than how it literally is, meaning it cannot be settled through scientific observation. In contrast, Question 1 can be tested through scientific observation.

Key points:

  • Question 2 is the non-empirical question.
  • It involves a subjective value judgment (whether something is morally wrong).
  • It asks how the world ought to be rather than how it literally is.
  • It cannot be settled through scientific observation.

Rubric: The student must correctly identify Question 2 as the non-empirical question and justify the diagnosis by explaining that it involves a subjective value judgment that asks how the world ought to be.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-27

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related