The Construction of Social RealitySimon and Schuster, 11. maí 2010 - 256 síður This short treatise looks at how we construct a social reality from our sense impressions; at how, for example, we construct a ‘five-pound note’ with all that implies in terms of value and social meaning, from the printed piece of paper we see and touch. In The Construction of Social Reality, eminent philosopher John Searle examines the structure of social reality (or those portions of the world that are facts only by human agreement, such as money, marriage, property, and government), and contrasts it to a brute reality that is independent of human agreement. Searle shows that brute reality provides the indisputable foundation for all social reality, and that social reality, while very real, is maintained by nothing more than custom and habit. |
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... Phenomena 7. Does the Real World Exist? Part I: Attacks on Realisrn 8. Does the Real World Exist? Part II: Could There Be a Proof of External Realism? 9. Truth and Correspondence Conclusion Endnotes Name Index Subject Index ...
... Phenomena 7. Does the Real World Exist? Part I: Attacks on Realisrn 8. Does the Real World Exist? Part II: Could There Be a Proof of External Realism? 9. Truth and Correspondence Conclusion Endnotes Name Index Subject Index ...
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... phenomena that are not in any obvious way physical or chemical gives rise to puZZlement. How, for example, can there be states of consciousness or meaningful speech acts as parts of the physical world? Many of the philosophical problems ...
... phenomena that are not in any obvious way physical or chemical gives rise to puZZlement. How, for example, can there be states of consciousness or meaningful speech acts as parts of the physical world? Many of the philosophical problems ...
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... phenomena. Notice, furthermore, that the scene as described has a huge, invisible ontology: the waiter did not actually own the beer he gave me, but he is employed by the restaurant, which owned it. The restaurant is required to post a ...
... phenomena. Notice, furthermore, that the scene as described has a huge, invisible ontology: the waiter did not actually own the beer he gave me, but he is employed by the restaurant, which owned it. The restaurant is required to post a ...
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... phenomena, stripped of their functional roles, than it is to see our surroundings in terms of their socially defined functions. 50 children learn to see moving cars, dollar bills, and full bathtubs; and it is only by force of ...
... phenomena, stripped of their functional roles, than it is to see our surroundings in terms of their socially defined functions. 50 children learn to see moving cars, dollar bills, and full bathtubs; and it is only by force of ...
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... phenomena we are seeking to explain.2 If neither the internal phenomenological nor the external behaviorist point of view is adequate, what then is the correct stance, the correct methodology, for describing the structure of social ...
... phenomena we are seeking to explain.2 If neither the internal phenomenological nor the external behaviorist point of view is adequate, what then is the correct stance, the correct methodology, for describing the structure of social ...
Efni
Creating Institutional Facts | |
Language and Social Reality | |
Iteration | |
Creation | |
Attacks on Realisrn | |
Could There Be | |
Truth and Correspondence | |
Conclusion | |
Name Index | |
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agentive functions argument assigned Background behavior believe brute facts brute physical causal chapter claim collective acceptance collective intentionality concepts consciousness constitutive rules conventional power correspondence theory counts create creation of institutional deontic describe direction of fit disquotation criterion distinction dollar bill entities epistemically objective Everest has snow example exists independently explain external realism human identical with Diogenes imposed imposition of function institutional facts institutional reality institutional structures intentional intrinsic language dependent linguistic logical structure logically equivalent marriage mental normal understanding notion ontologically objective perform performative utterances phenomena philosophical prelinguistic presupposes presupposition pump blood question relation representations require screwdriver sense sentence simply slingshot argument snow is white social facts social reality socially constructed reality sorts specified speech acts status-functions Strawson suppose symbolic teleology term things thought true statements truth conditions unconsciously utterances virtue words X term