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The Social Theory of Practices: Tradition, Tacit Knowledge and Presuppositions

✍ Scribed by Stephen Turner


Publisher
Polity Press
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Leaves
153
Edition
1st
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The concept of "practices"β€”whether of representation, of political or scientific traditions, or of organizational cultureβ€”is central to social theory. In this book, Stephen Turner presents the first analysis and critique of the idea of practice as it has developed in the various theoretical traditions of the social sciences and the humanities.

Understood broadly as a tacit understanding "shared" by a group, the concept of a practice has a fatal difficulty, Turner argues: there is no plausible mechanism by which a "practice" is transmitted or reproduced. The historical uses of the concept, from Durkheim to Kripke's version of Wittgenstein, provide examples of the contortions that thinkers have been forced into by this problem, and show the ultimate implausibility of the idea.

Turner's conclusion sketches a picture of what happens when we do without the notion of a shared practice, and how this bears on social theory and philosophy. It explains why social theory cannot get beyond the stage of constructing fuzzy analogies, and why the standard constructions of the contemporary philosophical problem of relativism depend upon this defective notion. This first book-length critique of practice theory is sure to stir discussion and controversy in a wide range of fields, from philosophy and science studies to sociology, anthropology, literary studies, and political and legal theory.

✦ Table of Contents


Acknowledgements ix
1 Practices and their Conceptual Kin 1
2 Practices as Causes 14
3 Practices as Presuppositions 28
4 Transmission 44
5 Change and History 78
6 The Opacity of Practice 101
Notes 124
Index 137


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