Abstract
In the social sciences, within the explanatory paradigm of structural individualism, a theory of
action – like rational choice theory – models how individuals behave and interact at the micro level
in order to explain macro observations as the aggregation of these individuals actions. A central
epistemological issue is that such theoretical models are stuck in a dilemma between falsity of their
basic assumptions and triviality of their explanation. On the one hand, models which have a great
empirical success often rest on unrealistic or even knowingly false assumptions; on the other hand,
more complex models, with additional more realistic hypotheses, can (trivially) adapt to a wide
range of situations and thus loose their explanatory power. Our purpose here is epistemological
and consists in wondering to which extent demanding realistic assumptions in such cases is a
relevant criterion with respect to the acceptance of a given explanatory model. Via an analogical
reasoning with physics, we argue that this criterion seems too strong and actually irrelevant.
General physical principles are not just idealized or unrealistic, they can also be formulated in many
different yet equivalent ways which do not imply the same fundamental unobservable entities or
phenomena. However, the classification of phenomena that such principles allow to highlight does
not depend, at the end, on any particular formulation of these basic assumptions. This suggests that
some hypotheses in theoretical models are actually not genuine empirical statements that could be
independently tested but only substrates of modeling embodying a classification principle. Thus,
we develop a structural invariance criterion that we then apply to rational choice models in the
social sciences. We argue that this criterion allows to escape from the epistemological dilemma
without condemning formal approaches like rational choice theory for their lack of realisticness nor
being stuck to any antirealist viewpoint.