A Philosophical Axiom Review on “THE METHODOLOGY” of Computing Research
Abstract
Computer Science today spans an increasing
range of theoretical and practical disciplines in its
exploration of what can and cannot be automated, which
is giving rise to a greater diversity of disciplinary
collaboration. Where collaboration is between
individuals from different disciplines then
accommodations are needed in agreeing on a research
philosophy and developing the research methodology. A
review of the general research literature suggested that
where research is undertaken by different disciplines
misalignment between the respective understandings of
the ontology, epistemology and axiology (o-e-a)
underpinning the research is not uncommon. Studying
the prominent literature, it developed an online mind
map to illustrate such misalignment and opened to
discussion. The mind map was constructively criticized by
experienced researchers from multiple disciplines and
able to enhance. In addition to consideration of the
different forms of collaboration deployed by researchers
– multi- disciplinary, inter-disciplinary, transdisciplinary
– conceptualisations of the
problem/enquiry domain itself were examined, as too was
the relevance of perspectives by non-research
stakeholders, who may be critical to the uptake of
research findings. The level and scale of complications
entailed by research interventions in navigating complex
situations suggest that the nature of o- e-a cannot be
determined by any one discipline (i.e., the ‘research as
usual’ ticket), but most probably will emerge through
collaborative negotiation. The development of such
processes has hitherto been marked by the transition
from multi-disciplinary to inter-disciplinary research.
Where research extends beyond and outside scientific
disciplines (i.e., includes non-scientific sources or
practice, engages with learning processes from wider
society) – trans- disciplinary research – the challenge to
academia is establishing whose o-e-a counts, that of the
researchers, or that of the knowledge users? This paper
explores these options.
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