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E-grāmata: Contributions to Social Ontology

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Recent years have seen a dramatic re-emergence of interest in ontology. From philosophy and social sciences to artificial intelligence and computer science, ontology is gaining interdisciplinary influence as a popular tool for applied research. Contributions to Social Ontology focuses specifically on these developments within the social sciences. The contributions reveal that this revived interest in social ontology involves far more than an unquestioning acceptance or application of the concepts and methods of academic philosophers. Instead as ontology permeates so many new areas, social ontology itself is evolving in new and fascinating ways. This book engages with these new developments, pushing it forward with cutting-edge new material from leading authors in this area, from Roy Bhaskar to Margaret Archer. It also explicitly analyzes the relationship between the new ontological projects and the more traditional approaches.
Figures and tables
ix
Contributors xi
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction: ontology, philosophy and the social sciences
1(14)
John Latsis
Clive Lawson
Nuno Martins
PART I Ontology and social theory
15(110)
The ontological status of subjectivity: the missing link between structure and agency
17(15)
Margaret S. Archer
Technology, technological determinism and the transformational model of social activity
32(18)
Clive Lawson
Ontological theorising and the assumptions issue in economics
50(18)
Stephen Pratten
Wittgenstein and the ontology of the social: some Kripkean reflections on Bourdieu's `Theory of Practice'
68(21)
Lorenzo Bernasconi-Kohn
Deducing natural necessity from purposive activity: the scientific realist logic of Habermas' theory of communicative action and Luhmann's systems theory
89(13)
Margaret Moussa
`Under-labouring' for ethics: Lukacs's critical ontology
102(23)
Mario Duayer
Joao Leonardo Medeiros
PART II Ontology and philosophy
125(80)
Quine and the ontological turn in economics
127(15)
John Latsis
Tracking down the transcendental argument and the synthetic a priori: chasing fairies or serious ontological business?
142(18)
David Tyfield
Re-examining Bhaskar's three ontological domains: the lessons from emergence
160(17)
Dave Elder-Vass
Real, invented or applied? Some reflections on scientific objectivity and social ontology
177(15)
Eleonora Montuschi
Theorising ontology
192(13)
Roy Bhaskar
PART III Ontology and applied research
205(119)
Freedom, possibility and ontology: rethinking the problem of `competitive ascent' in the Caribbean
207(24)
Patricia Northover
Michaeline Crichlow
On the ontology of international norm diffusion
231(21)
Lynn Savery
Realist social theorising and the emergence of state educational systems
252(21)
Tone Skinningsrud
The educational limits of critical realism? Emancipation and rational agency in the compulsory years of schooling
273(20)
Brad Shipway
Economics and autism: why the drive towards closure?
293(11)
John Lawson
Applying critical realism: re-conceptualising the emergent English early music performer labour market
304(20)
Nicholas Wilson
Index 324
Nuno Martins, Clive Lawson, John Spiro Latsis