The Explanation of Social Action: With a new preface by the author
Autor John Levi Martinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197601624
ISBN-10: 0197601626
Pagini: 424
Ilustrații: 10 b/w line drawings
Dimensiuni: 160 x 235 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197601626
Pagini: 424
Ilustrații: 10 b/w line drawings
Dimensiuni: 160 x 235 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
John Levi Martin's The Explanation of Social Action is the most important book on both the history and systematics of contemporary social theory, as well as the nature, limits, and prospects of an explanatory social science to be published in recent times. Martin's account is controversial, wide-ranging and simply riveting, and without a doubt revolutionary. Not just any 'theory' book, it's a must-read for all practicing social scientists, regardless of theoretical stripe and approach, whether qualitative, quantitative, historical or ethnographic. Anybody interested in transcending the impasses and dualisms standing in the way of a more thorough understanding of the sources of human action, motivation, and cognition-and thus improve his or her practice as a social scientist-will do well to delve into these pages.
If you thought you knew what makes a good social science explanation of conduct, this quirky, plucky, mind-bending book will make you think again. Martin will push, pull, irritate and seduce you to reconsider your cherished conceptions of cause, law, rule, counterfactual, motive, reason, judgment, and indeed the very nature of social action and knowledge. His plea for explanation as 'a social relationship' that coordinates rather than dismisses first-person perspectives, accommodates the intuitive capacities of actors, and captures the concrete properties of the everyday world is sure to spark debate and it will help fuel the development of a cognitively rich sociology.
Much of sociological theory starts with the assumption that social structure explains social action. In doing so, the meanings people attach to why they are acting are frequently dismissed or even cast as misguided. The Explanation of Social Action is a sophisticated attempt to examine this problem by probing how sociologists and philosophers have thought about causality, the nature of cognition, and the role of culture. John Levi Martin proposes a phenomenological solution to the problem that locates people in the context of social fields.
This is the most important and exciting book about social action since Peter Winch's The Idea of Social Science was published in 1958. Like Winch, John Levi Martin is highly skeptical about the possibility of causal explanations of human action, favoring an approach which takes the metaphor of rule-based games to have far greater explanatory value than the notion of a strict causal law…. a major work which rightly challenges a theoretical mindset that pervades the academy in general. Martin has done a great service to all who are interested in the explanation of human behavior be they sociologists, philosophers, or psychologists. Theorists who neglect his challenge do so at great peril.
Martin is definitely a new force to reckon with in the sociological realm.
While Martin may still be furbishing the concept of habitus, he has successfully carried out a splendid revitalization of field theory. Not only has he freed it from the elements which may have given it a dogmatic character in the past, he has also provided it with a strong and coherent conceptual base. If new elaborations of field theory are desirable, they should really begin here.
Martin takes sociology as his keystone discipline for the social sciences and the question why? as his keystone interrogative. Although Martin speaks as a sociologist, the perspectives and models of explanation that he selects for close analysis have applications in other areas of the social sciences, too. ... It is ideally suited as an illuminating and enjoyable text for a senior seminar in the respective social sciences or for an interdisciplinary capstone course.
It's a bold book. It is also a deeply and persuasively argued book that should be a touchstone in thinking about what we ought to be doing when we are doing sociology. ... The book is a genuine pleasure to read; a tour de force combination of argumentative complexity and stylistic clarity.
John Levi Martin is one of the freshest and most original theorists on the current scene. One never finishes his books with the same opinions one had when starting them. And there is no contemporary sociologist whose writing will make you laugh out loud as frequently as The Explanation of Social Action does... Martin's prose is vivid and his knowledge of an extraordinary range of ideas, literatures, and fascinating small facts is without parallel... In a most curious and enviable manners, Martin is simultaneously humble, careful, and wildly provocative. This book deserves a wide audience and ample debate.
Reading Martin will cause you to reset your bearings, reconsider long-held views, and reengage with core ideas in sociology.... In a most curious and enviable manner, Martin is simultaneously humble, careful, and wildly provocative. This book deserves a wide audience and ample debate.
Martin has presented a piece of social theory of the highest rigour.... Martin has presented a significant, compelling work which goes far beyond a discussion of problems of explanation but penetrates a complex highly important to future social theory: the interconnection between social practice, sensual perceptions and the 'consubstantiality' of the object world.
If you thought you knew what makes a good social science explanation of conduct, this quirky, plucky, mind-bending book will make you think again. Martin will push, pull, irritate and seduce you to reconsider your cherished conceptions of cause, law, rule, counterfactual, motive, reason, judgment, and indeed the very nature of social action and knowledge. His plea for explanation as 'a social relationship' that coordinates rather than dismisses first-person perspectives, accommodates the intuitive capacities of actors, and captures the concrete properties of the everyday world is sure to spark debate and it will help fuel the development of a cognitively rich sociology.
Much of sociological theory starts with the assumption that social structure explains social action. In doing so, the meanings people attach to why they are acting are frequently dismissed or even cast as misguided. The Explanation of Social Action is a sophisticated attempt to examine this problem by probing how sociologists and philosophers have thought about causality, the nature of cognition, and the role of culture. John Levi Martin proposes a phenomenological solution to the problem that locates people in the context of social fields.
This is the most important and exciting book about social action since Peter Winch's The Idea of Social Science was published in 1958. Like Winch, John Levi Martin is highly skeptical about the possibility of causal explanations of human action, favoring an approach which takes the metaphor of rule-based games to have far greater explanatory value than the notion of a strict causal law…. a major work which rightly challenges a theoretical mindset that pervades the academy in general. Martin has done a great service to all who are interested in the explanation of human behavior be they sociologists, philosophers, or psychologists. Theorists who neglect his challenge do so at great peril.
Martin is definitely a new force to reckon with in the sociological realm.
While Martin may still be furbishing the concept of habitus, he has successfully carried out a splendid revitalization of field theory. Not only has he freed it from the elements which may have given it a dogmatic character in the past, he has also provided it with a strong and coherent conceptual base. If new elaborations of field theory are desirable, they should really begin here.
Martin takes sociology as his keystone discipline for the social sciences and the question why? as his keystone interrogative. Although Martin speaks as a sociologist, the perspectives and models of explanation that he selects for close analysis have applications in other areas of the social sciences, too. ... It is ideally suited as an illuminating and enjoyable text for a senior seminar in the respective social sciences or for an interdisciplinary capstone course.
It's a bold book. It is also a deeply and persuasively argued book that should be a touchstone in thinking about what we ought to be doing when we are doing sociology. ... The book is a genuine pleasure to read; a tour de force combination of argumentative complexity and stylistic clarity.
John Levi Martin is one of the freshest and most original theorists on the current scene. One never finishes his books with the same opinions one had when starting them. And there is no contemporary sociologist whose writing will make you laugh out loud as frequently as The Explanation of Social Action does... Martin's prose is vivid and his knowledge of an extraordinary range of ideas, literatures, and fascinating small facts is without parallel... In a most curious and enviable manners, Martin is simultaneously humble, careful, and wildly provocative. This book deserves a wide audience and ample debate.
Reading Martin will cause you to reset your bearings, reconsider long-held views, and reengage with core ideas in sociology.... In a most curious and enviable manner, Martin is simultaneously humble, careful, and wildly provocative. This book deserves a wide audience and ample debate.
Martin has presented a piece of social theory of the highest rigour.... Martin has presented a significant, compelling work which goes far beyond a discussion of problems of explanation but penetrates a complex highly important to future social theory: the interconnection between social practice, sensual perceptions and the 'consubstantiality' of the object world.
Notă biografică
John Levi Martin is Florence Borchert Bartling Professor of Sociology at The University of Chicago. He is also the author of Thinking Through Theory and Social Structures, which was awarded the 2010 Theory Prize from the American Sociological Association.