ANALYTICAL SKILLS
What is analysis?
- Produce stronger analysis by understanding its components
- Simplify the process thanks to a five-step methodology
HOW TO
Analysis is an oddly vague concept, given how central it is to our lives. There are many ordinary things we could not do without it. It would be dangerous to drive or cross the street without analysing the tangle of moving objects, road signs and weather conditions that inform our movements. The concept pervades virtually every field: Chemistry, mathematics, syntax, finance, journalism, and psychology all hinge on analysis. Such diversity makes it difficult to pin down: Can a blood test and a thesis in political science have anything in common? It will take a few analytic steps to prove it.
It is useful, however, to see
that analysis proceeds in five stages. First, one must break the subject into
its constituent parts. Any topic can be divided into subtopics, sub-subtopics, and so on. A diplomatic crisis, for example, will involve at least two
countries, whose officials have different views, which in turn are informed by
a range of domestic, foreign, and even personal factors. A speech can be broken
into several themes, which in turn are held up by certain facts, views or
lies. The unemployment rate, for its part, may be split up by year,
socioeconomic class, and geography. The breakdown serves the essential function
of producing distinct, descriptive categories containing data points: a network
of players, a string of arguments or a set of statistics.
Second, analysis explores how these data points relate to each other. The diplomatic incident may reveal that opposing camps are in fact internally split between advocates of escalation and partisans of rapprochement. The speech will weave arguments, tone, and venue into an overarching message, from which we can start guessing at its underlying intention. Unemployment graphs likewise display trends that lend themselves to interpretation.
Good sociological analysis is as much about instinct as experience
Third, the analytic process will shift to external connections to provide perspective. Any event is part of a chronology. No speech takes place in a vacuum, any more than unemployment occurs for no reason. A large array of temporal, conceptual, and contextual links can give more depth to your analysis. Indeed, at this stage, analysis draws on analogy, by comparing what you have observed to other frames of reference. (A militia, say, is also a social movement, to which the whole toolbox of sociology applies.) External connections will help you determine causality: The incident, the speech or the spike in unemployment are at least in part prompted by broader factors.
Fourth comes the leap of faith. Analysis is always an approximation, derived from partial observations and debatable categorisation, not to mention freewheeling mental associations. A blood test is rarely meaningful unless interpreted by a doctor, whose assessment will be influenced by prior knowledge of the patient and experience of similar cases. However scientific an analytic process may be, its conclusions, ultimately, rest on extrapolation.
The fifth and final stage consists in challenging your findings, which are only valid insofar as they stand the test of time. Consult others and probe differing viewpoints; extend the scope of your examination to encompass data that appears to contradict your verdict; or apply your logic to a related object of inquiry, to see if this helps to see things in a new light.
Analysis simplifies, by bringing complexity down to a small set of concepts
Problematically, the first of these stages garners far more attention than the others. Conventional definitions of analysis always highlight the breakdown into constituent parts—not least because the word “analysis,” etymologically, means itemization. Some mention the search for internal and external correlations. But none ever name the last two stages in the process, which we could call extrapolation and testing..
Indeed, analysis is less about
pulling an object apart than about creating new units and putting them
together: Deconstructing something serves no other purpose than to rebuild it,
using different frameworks and configurations to add structure, clarity, and
meaning. Here again, a blood test offers a good illustration: The original red
liquid says little to a doctor, but its reconstruction into a series of names
and figures speaks volumes.
Similarly, we interpret the
diplomatic incident based not on the multitude of individual players and
actions that compose it, but on concepts such as camps, escalation, or
rapprochement. We view a speech as provocative or reformist—bundling a succession
of words into such notions. Likewise, we can only understand unemployment by
grouping large numbers of personal stories into averages and trends. Analysis
simplifies, by bringing the complexity of any object down to a small set of
concepts, which encapsulate what we really need to know about it.
There is a
biological reason for this. Although our brain stocks plentiful information, it
can only process a small number of items at a time. The act of “thinking” is
only made possible by bundling information into packets; that is what concepts
are for. Thus, we can talk about getting “lunch” without having to unpack all
its possible meanings, which would take until dinner. Analysis consists of
finding the combination of concepts that conveys most effectively our
understanding of the subject.
This memo itself
illustrates how the above process unfolds. In analysing analysis, the obvious
starting point was everyday life experiences—how analysis manifests itself in
ordinary tasks, recognised disciplines, and widespread definitions. The
five-step methodology (itemization, internal links, external links,
extrapolation, and testing) then served to organise that variety into a
universal, conceptual structure. Finally, the discussion of information,
bundled together into digestible packets, was intended to make things more
practical, by showing what analysis builds on. In this text, three such bundles
seem enough, to convey that analysis is commonplace, follows a recognisable
sequence, and creates meaning, rather than uncovers it.
29 October 2018
Illustration credit: Bauhaus Ausstellung by Friz Schleifer
on Flickr / public domain; Analysis of beauty plate 1 by William Hogarth on Wikipedia / public domain.