Description
Developing IS theories has been an important goal for many IS researchers. Towards that end we discuss how taxonomic theory can be developed. According to Gregor, taxonomic theories are theories for analyzing, which she classifies as Type I Theory. More specifically, we show that some taxonomies, after meeting some conditions, can lead to taxonomic theory. Building upon a method for taxonomy development, we present a prescriptive framework for the development of taxonomic theory which includes evaluation criteria for theorizing outcomes. To illustrate this, we consider an existing taxonomy of an IS-related phenomenon (mobile applications) and then show how the taxonomy satisfies taxonomic theory requirements. In addition, we show how the development of taxonomic theory helps to analyze IS-related phenomena and how it can form the basis for more comprehensive IS-related explanatory, predictive or design theories.
Recommended Citation
Muntermann, Jan; Nickerson, Robert; and Varshney, Upkar, "Towards the Development of a Taxonomic Theory" (2015). AMCIS 2015 Proceedings. 4.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/amcis2015/ISPhil/GeneralPresentations/4
Towards the Development of a Taxonomic Theory
Developing IS theories has been an important goal for many IS researchers. Towards that end we discuss how taxonomic theory can be developed. According to Gregor, taxonomic theories are theories for analyzing, which she classifies as Type I Theory. More specifically, we show that some taxonomies, after meeting some conditions, can lead to taxonomic theory. Building upon a method for taxonomy development, we present a prescriptive framework for the development of taxonomic theory which includes evaluation criteria for theorizing outcomes. To illustrate this, we consider an existing taxonomy of an IS-related phenomenon (mobile applications) and then show how the taxonomy satisfies taxonomic theory requirements. In addition, we show how the development of taxonomic theory helps to analyze IS-related phenomena and how it can form the basis for more comprehensive IS-related explanatory, predictive or design theories.