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The Methodology of Positive Accounting.

Charles Christenson

The Accounting Review 1983

ABSTRACT: Jensen, Watts and Zimmerman (referred to hereafter, following Jensen [1976], as "the Rochester School of Accounting") have charged that most accounting theories are "unscientific" because they are "normative." They advocate the development of "positive" theories to explain actual accounting practice. The program of the Rochester School raises a number of methodological issues that are addressed in this article. First, it is argued that the Rochester School's criticism of traditional accounting theory is off the mark because of a failure to distinguish between two different levels of phenomena. Second, it is argued that the concept of "positive" theory is based on the misconception (derived from nineteenth-century positivism) that empirical science is concerned solely with the actual, with "what is." Empirical theories, it is shown, are negative in their import; they state what is to be taken as empirically impossible. Third, it is shown that "negative" theories of the sort described in this article are exactly what is needed in predictive, explanatory, and normative reasoning. Finally, it is argued that the standards advocated by the Rochester School for the appraisal of their own theories are so weak that those theories fail to satisfy Popper's [1959] proposal for demarking science from metaphysics.

DOI
10.2308/tar-4487431
Volume
58 (1)
Pages
1-22
Language
en
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