Between the 1970s and the 1980s social practices were the object of theoretical research in some areas of sociology and cultural anthropology, to meet the need to integrate structuralist, functionalist or Marxist objectivist theories of society by using more sensitive types of approach to social actors, who were viewed as subjects capable of individual decisions, actions and interpretations. In particular, the role of reflexion on social practices became more relevant in the critique of society as an organic, unified whole, also stressing an alternative to liberal outlooks and describing society in the basic terms of relationships between individuals. Social practices are constituted by an organic set of base elements usually applicable also outside structured practices but assuming a peculiar network of relationships within them. This studies is an attempt to show the distinct traits that rationality criteria take while operating inside social, cooperative practices, also pointing to the consequences that this configuration has in the relationship between practictioners and institutions.

Monti, P., On the rationality of social practices, in Botturi, F. (ed.), Understanding Human Experience: Reason and Faith, Peter Lang, Berna 2012: 103- 120 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/56163]

On the rationality of social practices

Monti, Paolo
2012

Abstract

Between the 1970s and the 1980s social practices were the object of theoretical research in some areas of sociology and cultural anthropology, to meet the need to integrate structuralist, functionalist or Marxist objectivist theories of society by using more sensitive types of approach to social actors, who were viewed as subjects capable of individual decisions, actions and interpretations. In particular, the role of reflexion on social practices became more relevant in the critique of society as an organic, unified whole, also stressing an alternative to liberal outlooks and describing society in the basic terms of relationships between individuals. Social practices are constituted by an organic set of base elements usually applicable also outside structured practices but assuming a peculiar network of relationships within them. This studies is an attempt to show the distinct traits that rationality criteria take while operating inside social, cooperative practices, also pointing to the consequences that this configuration has in the relationship between practictioners and institutions.
2012
Inglese
Understanding Human Experience: Reason and Faith
9783034311311
Monti, P., On the rationality of social practices, in Botturi, F. (ed.), Understanding Human Experience: Reason and Faith, Peter Lang, Berna 2012: 103- 120 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/56163]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/56163
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