The Construction of Social RealitySimon and Schuster, 1995 - 241 páginas 'John Searle has a distinctive intellectual style. It combines razor-sharp analysis with a swaggering chip-on-the-shoulder impudence that many of his opponents might find intolerably abrasive were it not for the good humour that pervades all he writes. This is a man who likes a good philosophical brawl.'New Scientist |
Contenido
The Building Blocks of Social Reality | 1 |
Creating Institutional Facts | 31 |
Language and Social Reality | 59 |
4 The General Theory of Institutional Facts | 79 |
Explanation of Social Phenomena | 127 |
Does the Real World Exist? | 177 |
Truth and Correspondence | 199 |
Conclusion | 227 |
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Términos y frases comunes
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 direction of fit disquotational criterion distinction dollar bill entities epistemic epistemically objective Everest has snow example exists independently explain external realism func human identical with Diogenes imposed institutional facts institutional reality intentional intrinsic linguistic logical structure logically equivalent marriage ment mental normal understanding notion ontologically subjective perform phenomena philosophical prelinguistic presupposes presupposition pump blood question relation relative representations require screwdriver sense sentence simply slingshot argument snow is white social facts social reality socially constructed reality sorts specified speech acts status-functions stitutional Strawson suppose symbolic teleology tence term things thought tion tional true statements truth conditions utterances virtue words X term
