Index
ISBN: 978-1-80262-362-8, eISBN: 978-1-80262-361-1
ISSN: 0278-1204
Publication date: 12 December 2022
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
(2022), "Index", Halley, J.A. and Dahms, H.F. (Ed.) The Centrality of Sociality (Current Perspectives in Social Theory, Vol. 39), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 255-258. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0278-120420220000039013
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023 by Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Absolutist materialism
, 177–178
Action
, 68, 208
theory
, 178–179
Actor
, 62–64
Actor-network theory
, 70
Adorno, Theodor W.
, 88–89
culture industry
, 114–115, 117
and essay
, 113–114
literary criticism
, 117–121
music
, 115–117
Agency dependence
, 77
Anomie
, 243
Anti-historicism
, 177–178
Apriorism
, 13
Apriorists
, 12–13
Art as experience
, 188
Art Institution
, 118
Attention
, 196
Avant-garde
, 74–76
Bakhtin
, 179–181
Basic fact
, 2
Basic social fact
, 176
Becoming
, 88
Being-in-the-middle
, 3, 234–235
Bounded rationality
, 195–196, 198, 217–220
Bounded system
, 156
Brown, Michael E.
, 151
style
, 77
Capital
, 10
Capitalism
, 10, 238–239
Capitalist society
, 155
Classic “game” model
, 214
Classical empiricism
, 12–13
Cognitive sociology
, 7–8, 195–196, 245–246
Collage
, 75
Collectives
, 69
representations
, 12–13
Commodity production
, 10
Communicative errors
, 7–8
Consciousness
, 9–10, 34–37
Consequentialism
, 213
Cooperation
, 164
Cops
, 70–71
Course of activity
, 3, 5, 68–69, 72–73, 152–153, 178–179, 187, 190, 245–246
immanence of time
, 79–80
nonrepeatability as principle of surrealism
, 73–74
Critical realism
, 43, 91–92
Critical social ontology, conceptual categories of
, 159–162
Critical sociology
, 43–44
Critical theory
, 131–132
Critique
, 150
Culture industry
, 114–115
Dada
, 68, 73–74, 76, 118
Democracy
, 9–10
Democrat
, 29
Density of practices
, 54–56
Dialectic
, 13, 69–70
Dialogism
, 179
Disciplinarity
, 209
Discursive speech
, 178–179
Durkheim
, 11
consciousness
, 32–33
economy
, 33
fascism
, 36
identity
, 26
spirit
, 25–27
Effervescence, moments of
, 22–24
Entitization
, 46–47
Essay
, 89–90
Ethnography
, 61
Exceptionalist America
, 138–144
Expertise
, 217–220
Fascism
, 102–103
Fetishism
, 10
Fragmentation
, 42
Free market
, 32–33
Freedom
, 243–244
French Revolution
, 28–29
Generative categories
, 157
Genetic structuralism
, 48–49, 108
German consciousness
, 34
German culture
, 98
Goldmann, Lucien
, 88–89, 104, 113
early Lukács
, 104–107
novel form and society
, 107–111
Structures Mentales et Creation Ulturelle
, 111–113
Hegel’s Philosophy of Right
, 133–138
Heraclitus
, 69–70
Herbert Simon’s model of bounded rationality
, 195–196
Heteroglossia
, 179–180
Historical materialism
, 82
Historicism
, 80, 82, 177–178
Historiographical paradigm
, 45–46
Human affairs
, 2
Human consciousness
, 11
Human freedom
, 33–34
Human issues
, 184
Human reality
, 226
Human reason categories
, 11–14
Humanity
, 187
Hypothetical individual
, 60
actor
, 62–64
ethnography
, 61
mock-up
, 62–64
situated nature of self and body
, 62–64
Ideology
, 72
Immanence of social
, 70
Immanence of time
, 79–80
Individuality
, 73
Inferential function
, 203
Intentionality
, 73, 235
Intersubjectivity
, 151–152
Judgment
, 151–152
Kantianism
, 90–94
Knowledge
, 10
knowledge-critique of ideology approach
, 127
of social relations
, 185
Language in culture & cognition
, 195–196
Latent in principle
, 209–210
Lebensphilosophie
, 90, 94–95
Leitmotiv
, 98–99
Linguistic understanding
, 205
Literary criticism
, 117–121
Little Dorrit (Dickens)
, 180–181
Logic of justification
, 61
Logical conformity as moral force
, 14–16
nature, art, and social construction (representation) of reality
, 14–16
Lukács, Georg
, 88–90, 104
on Alexander Solzhenitsyn
, 103–104
Kantianism and Marxism
, 90–94
and Thomas Mann
, 94–103
Mana
, 18–19
Manifold relations
, 243
Marx’s “Capital”
, 68
Marxian theory
, 150
Marxism
, 90–94
Material being
, 21–22
Material relations of production
, 31–34
Material sociality
, 130–131
Metaphysics of content
, 72
Mock-up
, 62–64
Money
, 10
Monism of Brown
, 77–78
ontological priority of sociality in human affairs
, 78–79
Moral being
, 21–22
Moral consciousness
, 21
Moral power
, 19, 25, 27
Morality
, 17, 19, 33–34
Music
, 115–117
Mutuality
, 2
Nomological prejudice
, 42
Nomos
, 17, 19–21
Nonrepeatability
in art and life
, 70–72
as principle of surrealism
, 73–74
Ongoing accomplishment
, 70
Ostensible emotional transparency
, 29
Personal autonomy
, 2
Phenomenologies of time
, 82–83
Philosophy
, 131–132
Phylogenetic capacities
, 159–160
Play of structure
, 70
Politics of expertise
, 204–210
Populist groups
, 25
Post-1848 cultural development
, 97–98
Posthuman
, 187
Power
, 162–168
Practice
, 42
Praxis
, 160
“Pre-theoretical” object
, 209
Predicament of intelligibility
, 203–204
Procedural rationality
, 195–196
Psychology
, 230
Quasi-real model of bounded rationality
, 195–196
“Quasi-realism” of problem-solving
, 7–8, 210, 217
Question of society
, 210–217
Rational choice theory
, 77
Reciprocity
, 189
Reductionism
, 234
Reflexivity
, 153–154, 235
Relations
, 158
Reliability
, 188
Religious force
, 21
Representational representationality
, 7–8, 195–196, 198
and problem of examples
, 199–204
Rousseau
, 175–176
Self-consciousness
, 153–154
Self-reflexive theorizing
, 178–179
Shaggy Dog Animation
, 70–71
Shared symbols
, 25
Simon’s model
, 7–8
Situated nature of self and body
, 62–64
Situational rationality
, 7–8, 195–196
Social
, 1, 3, 44, 48, 184, 190, 226, 233
assumptions
, 226–233
Bourdieu and
, 48–50
Brown’s concept of
, 152–156
disorienting promise of modern society
, 131–133
Exceptionalist America
, 138–144
flattening
, 50–51
Hegel’s Philosophy of Right
, 133–138
in intellectual life
, 52–54
subjects and situations
, 61–64
text
, 60–61
theorizing
, 64–65
Social action
, 150–152
Social change
, 229–230
cognitive sociology
, 195–196
language in culture & cognition
, 195–196
quasi realism
, 210–217
representational representationality
, 195–196, 198
situational rationality
, 195–196
strategy in human problem-solving
, 195–196
Social Contract (Rousseau)
, 175–176
Social critique
, 168–171
Social facts
, 214–215
Social forms, geometry of
, 162–168
Social history
, 45–46
Social metaphysics
, 149–150
Social nature
, 88
Social ontology
, 6–7, 149–150, 152, 156, 159, 168, 171
Social philosophy
, 126, 130–132
Social power
, 164–165
Social practices
, 160–161
Social progress
, 236
Social reality
, 155
Social realm
, 15–16
Social schemes
, 160–162
Social sciences
, 1–2, 187, 189
unity of
, 42–44
Social structures
, 161
Social substratum
, 45–46
Social theory
, 126, 130–132, 176–177
Social thought as historical products of social labor
, 16–17
Social totality
, 60, 88, 126–127, 131, 155–156
Sociality
, 1–4, 8, 70, 88, 126–127, 150, 176–177, 195–196, 226, 237
human
, 7
immanence
, 4
ontological priority of sociality in human affairs
, 78–79
in Simon’s thinking
, 197–198
Societal facts
, 214–215
Society
, 6, 13–14, 126–127, 149–150, 195–196, 226, 228
Socio-cultural-political assemblies
, 24–25
Sociological imagination
, 186–187
Sociological theory
, 131–132, 207
Sociologism
, 49
Sociology
, 1, 43, 126, 130–132, 232
of concepts
, 44–48
of knowledge
, 17
Space
, 11–12
Spirit
, 25–27
of revolution
, 27–31
Spiritual
, 10
power
, 19–21
principle
, 21–22
Status anxiety
, 33
Status threat
, 33
Strategy in human problem-solving
, 195–196
Structuralism
, 48–49
“Sub-theoretical” object
, 209–210
Subjective idealism
, 246–247
Subjectivity
, 155, 157–158, 235
Surrealism
, 118
Temporality
, 80–82
Tentative hypothesis
, 22
Textualization
, 72
Theorizing
, 209–210, 217–220
Theory/theorizing
, 176–177, 187
Time
, 11–12, 82
Totality
, 92, 105, 154, 229
Totem
, 17–19
Totemism
, 9–10, 18
Trans-individual subjectivity
, 246–247
Transindividual subject
, 105–107
Trust
, 2
Truth
, 187–188
Unity of social sciences
, 42–44
Validity
, 187–188
Wakan
, 18–19
War
, 34–37
- Prelims
- Introduction: What Is Distinctively Human About Human Affairs?
- Consciousness and Crisis Today: Durkheim, Marx, Spinoza and Revolutionary vs. Reactionary Spirit
- The Uncertainties of the Social
- Brown on Sociality and the Social
- Brown's “Course of Activity”: Non-Repeatability, the Avant-Garde, and Temporality
- The Concept of Sociality in the Literary Criticism of Georg Lukács, Lucien Goldmann, and Theodor W. Adorno
- In Defense of “the Social”: Convergences and Divergences Between the Humanities and Social Sciences in the United States
- The Ontology of the Social as a Theory of Social Forms
- Other Voices: The Concept of Heteroglossia in Michael Brown's Concept of the Social
- Conceptual Implications in Social Sciences for Inquiring into the Social. Insights from Michael E. Brown's The Concept of the Social in Uniting the Social Sciences and Humanities
- Theorizing, Bounded Rationality, and Expertise: Cognitive Sociology and the Quasi-Realism of Problem-Solving as a Course of Activity
- Response: What Is Distinctively Human About Human Affairs: Sociality and the Question of Society
- Index