
Approaches to the World
The Multiple Dimensions of the Social- Autor:innen:
- Verlag:
- 2021
Zusammenfassung
Als Antwort auf die Kritik des methodologischen Ethnozentrismus entwickelt Lindemann eine neue allgemeinen Sozialtheorie, die sozio-kulturelle Differenzen detailliert zu analysieren vermag. Soziale Ordnung wird dabei als eine symbolisch vermittelte, raum-zeitlich verfasste Ordnung verstanden, die durch eine Ordnung der Gewalt integriert wird. Mit diesem Ansatz verbindet Lindemann drei relevante Diskursstränge der letzten Jahrzehnten: Erstens, die Debatten um die Notwendigkeit theoretischer Neuorientierungen, wie den linguistic turn, den body und spatial turn usw., zweitens, die Debatten um den Status nichtmenschlicher Akteure bzw. um die Grenzen der Sozialwelt sowie drittens, die Debatten um die Bedeutung von Gewalt für soziale Ordnungsbildung.
Schlagworte
Publikation durchsuchen
Bibliographische Angaben
- Copyrightjahr
- 2021
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-7808-9
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7489-2212-4
- Verlag
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Seiten
- 350
- Produkttyp
- Monographie
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisSeiten 1 - 10 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- The current state of the discussion
- An expanded social theory
- The structure of this book
- 1.1 Introduction to the discursive context
- 1.2 The expanded problem of order
- Emancipatory cognitive interest
- 2.2.1 The expanded problem of order as consequence of the broadening of understanding
- 2.2.2 Effectivity and action as polar opposites
- 2.3.1 The transcendental constitution of the alter ego
- Reduction to functioning, embodied consciousness
- Functioning consciousness and the other I
- 2.4.1 Historicizing the matrix of modernity
- The principle of the closed question
- The principle of the open question
- 3.1 Dimensions of the social ordering system
- 3.2 Types of order formation
- 3.3.1 The method of theory construction
- 3.3.2 The boundary realization of bodies
- 3.3.3 Centric positionality
- 3.3.4 Excentric positionality and the shared world: the social undecidedness relation
- 3.3.5 Ordering problems of excentric positionality
- 3.3.6 Historical shared worlds as determinations of the social undecidedness relation
- 3.3.7 Forming the lived body and its boundaries
- 3.3.8 Communicating boundary realization
- 3.3.9 The mediated immediacy of order formation
- 3.3.10 The problem of sociologism
- 3.3.11 Digression on the social undecidedness relation and social theory
- Modal time
- Modal time – centric positionality
- The spatiotemporal structure of touch
- The time-space of excentric embodied selves
- Space
- Variable centering
- Local space
- Digital space
- Time
- Modal time
- Duration as chaotic multiplicity
- The duration of the individual person
- Shared duration
- The duration of things
- The duration of structures of expectation
- Before/after sequencing – digital time
- Space-time structures of determining the social undecidedness relation
- 3.5.1 Centric positionality
- Institutionalized composite acts
- Technology as communicative proposal of meaning
- Complex composite acts I
- Digital spacetime as a medium of construction for advanced artifacts
- Principles of technical construction
- The structure of reflexivity
- Symbols with identical meaning
- Symbol formation under conditions of expanded world-openness
- A renewed use theory of meaning
- Institutions and mediating institutions
- Institutions
- Complex composite acts II
- Reflexive institutions
- Excursus: The function of success media in Parsons and Luhmann’s theory of society
- Reflexive institutions of beginning and participation
- Reflexive institutions and the creation of social forms of mediation: organizations and networks
- 4.1 Violence or the physical exertion of force
- 4.2 Violence in social science theories
- 4.3.1 The mediated immediacy of violence
- Excursus on the dispensability of symbiotic mechanisms
- The sociological dimension of Derrida’s critique of Benjamin
- Perpetrators – victims – thirds
- Diabolical symbolization – the boundaries of violence
- 4.4.1 Violence and procedure
- 4.4.2 The procedural order of the sacrificial victim
- 4.4.3 The procedural order of compensation
- 4.4.4 The procedural order of the judicial system
- 4.4.5 The procedural order of the non-violent representation of law
- 4.4.6 Methodological implications of a reflexive concept of violence
- Summary
- Individualization as a degenerate form
- 5.2.1 Dia-Symbolon
- 5.2.2 Space and time
- 5.2.3 Differentiation of universes of meaning
- 5.3 Body individualism in contingent multi-sociation
- 5.4 The reflexive relationship between social theory and a theory of society
- BibliographySeiten 315 - 340 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Name indexSeiten 341 - 344 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Subject indexSeiten 345 - 350 Download Kapitel (PDF)




