From sociological-theory-skills
Stress-tests Sociological Theory manuscript reasoning by auditing premise-to-conclusion logic, warrants, and rival explanations using Toulmin's framework.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/sociological-theory-skills:soctheory-argument-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Concepts and propositions exist, but the reasoning that connects them is thin
At ST, logical soundness plays the role statistics play at empirical journals. The argument is the evidence. This skill makes it valid before reviewers find the gaps.
Walk the manuscript's spine — premises → mechanism → propositions → conclusion — and check each link. Reed's "Justifying Sociological Knowledge" (ST 2008, 26(2):101–129) frames the central demand: every theoretical claim carries an implicit warrant, and you owe the reader the warrant, not just the claim.
soctheory-theory-construction? An unstated premise is a hidden bet.soctheory-boundary-conditions).A compact discipline for each load-bearing proposition:
A proposition that cannot fill warrant and rebuttal is an assertion, not a theoretical claim.
Because ST does not test, you adjudicate rivals theoretically:
| Rival situation | Theoretical move |
|---|---|
| Rival explains the same cases | Show your account is more parsimonious or unifies more |
| Rival rests on a shakier premise | Expose and challenge that premise |
| Rival and yours seem observationally equivalent | Specify a conceptual difference that matters, even if untested |
| Rival is a special case of yours | Subsume it and show the added range |
【Spine】premises → mechanism → propositions → conclusion: valid? [Y/N + gaps]
【Warrants stated】per load-bearing claim: yes / missing [...]
【Strongest rival】[named] → why yours wins (theoretically)
【Counter-case】[case] → handled / becomes a boundary condition
【Inference types】deductive / abductive / analogical — each legitimate?
【Next step】soctheory-boundary-conditions
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin sociological-theory-skillsBuilds sociological theory from positioned problem to defined concepts, explicit mechanisms, internally consistent propositions, and scope conditions. Does not test validity against rivals or set boundary conditions.
Structures theoretical arguments for American Journal of Sociology manuscripts into portable, discipline-level contributions with explicit concepts, mechanisms, and scope conditions.
Builds portable theoretical arguments for ASR manuscripts. Defines mechanisms, scope conditions, and concepts across quantitative, ethnographic, comparative-historical, and computational methods.