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40Book Review: Science of Science and Reflexivity (review)Philosophy of the Social Sciences 36 (4): 496-499. 2006.
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85Frederick A. Olafson, "Heidegger and the Philosophy of Mind" (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 28 (3): 466. 1990.
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147Wittgenstein + Heidegger on the stream of lifeInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 36 (3): 307-328. 1993.This paper combines views of Wittgenstein and Heidegger into an account of mind/ action. It does this by suggesting that these two philosophers be viewed in part as descendants of Life‐philosophy (Lebensphilosophie). Part I describes the conception of life that informs and emerges from these thinkers. Parts Two and Three detail particular aspects of this conception: Wittgenstein on the constitution of states of life and Heidegger on the flow‐structure of the stream of life. The Conclusion offers…Read more
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29The Social and Political BodyGuilford Press. 1996.Beginning with the provocative premise that the body is the anchor of the social order, this unique book delves into the multidimensional relationship between sociopolitical bodies and human bodies. Celebrated authors, including Judith Butler and Emily Martin, explore the ways that prevailing economic and political institutions affect our physical selves and how we experience them, and, in turn, the ways that our bodily senses, energies, activities, and desires reinforce or challenge the societa…Read more
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448Social Practices: A Wittgensteinian Approach to Human Activity and the SocialCambridge University Press. 1996.This book addresses key topics in social theory such as the basic structures of social life, the character of human activity, and the nature of individuality. Drawing on the work of Wittgenstein, the author develops an account of social existence that argues that social practices are the fundamental phenomenon in social life. This approach offers insight into the social formation of individuals, surpassing and critiquing the existing practice theories of Bourdieu, Giddens, Lyotard and Oakeshott.…Read more
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94On studying the past scientificallyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 49 (4). 2006.This critical review of Aviezer Tucker's Our Knowledge of the Past: A Philosophy of Historiography examines the character, scope, and limits of scientific historiography, the overall topic of Tucker's book. The review begins by arguing that the book both unwittingly juggles two criteria for scientific, as opposed to nonscientific, historiography - the production of knowledge and Kuhnian disciplinary matrices - and wrongly construes the subject matter of such historiography to be present evidence…Read more
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824 Landscapes as Temporalspatial PhenomenaIn Jeff Malpas (ed.), The Place of Landscape: Concepts, Contexts, Studies, Mit Press. pp. 65. 2011.This chapter argues that landscapes are not only spatial phenomena but spatial-temporal entities in that they both occur in time and occupy space. It further argues that aside from being spatial-temporal entities, they are “temporalspatial” phenomena as well, by virtue of the fact that they are anchored and drawn into the timespace of human activity. This phenomenon of “activity timespace” is an overlooked aspect in social theory, although it is arguably an important aspect of social life. Times…Read more
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56Book Review: Bourdieu: A Critical Reader (review)Philosophy of the Social Sciences 32 (3): 445-449. 2002.
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92The Temporality of TeleologyNew Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 5 123-143. 2005.
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Todd May, Our Practices, Our Selves. Or, What it Means to be Human (review)Philosophy in Review 22 340-342. 2002.
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51Review of Stephen H. Daniel (ed.), Current Continental Theory and Modern Philosophy (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (8). 2006.
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68Martin Heidegger: theorist of spaceSteiner. 2007.Explaining Heidegger's ideas on spatial phenomena simply and succinctly, this book will be provocative and invaluable to anyone interested in space and spatial theory. The author gives incisive, informative, and compelling analyses of Heidegger's overall philosophy and of his changing ideas about space, spatiality, the clearing, places, sites, and dwelling. This study also charts the legacy of these ideas in philosophy, geography, architecture, and anthropology and includes a bibliography of sel…Read more
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Hans Sluga and David G. Stern, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Wittgenstein Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 17 (4): 291-293. 1997.
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35Postmodern Contentions: Epochs, Politics, SpaceGuilford Press. 1993.John Paul Jones III, Wolfgang Natter, and Theodore Schatzki are co-Directors of the University of Kentucky Committee on Social Theory. They are members, respectively, of the departments of Geography, Germanic Languages and Literatures, and Philosophy.
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124The social bearing of natureInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 43 (1). 2000.This essay examines how nature pertains to social life. Part I describes the social ontology the essay employs to address this issue. This ontology is of the site variety and is opposed to ontologies of both the individualist and socialist sorts. Part II describes where nature appears in this ontology. Artifacts are differentiated from nature, and much of ?nature? is shown to be second nature, a type of artifact that looks and feels like nature. Part II concludes by disputing the idea that natur…Read more
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35Simulation theory and the verstehen school: A Wittgensteinian approachIn K. R. Stueber & H. H. Kogaler (eds.), Empathy and Agency: The Problem of Understanding in the Human Sciences, Boulder: Westview Press. 2000.
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357Practices and actions a Wittgensteinian critique of Bourdieu and GiddensPhilosophy of the Social Sciences 27 (3): 283-308. 1997.This article criticizes Bourdieu's and Giddens's overintellectualizing accounts of human activity on the basis of Wittgenstein's insights into practical under standing. Part 1 describes these two theorists' conceptions of a homology between the organization of practices (spatial-temporal manifolds of action) and the governance of individual actions. Part 2 draws on Wittgenstein's discussions of linguistic definition and following a rule to criticize these conceptions for ascribing content to the…Read more
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171Living out of the past: Dilthey and Heidegger on life and historyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 46 (3). 2003.This essay examines continuities and transformations in Heidegger's appropriation of Dilthey's account of life and the accompanying picture of history between the end of World War One and Being and Time . The essay also judges the cogency of two conclusions that Heidegger draws in that book about history, viz, that historicity qua feature of Dasein's being both underlies objective history and makes the scholarly narration of history possible. Part one describes Dilthey's account of life, Heidegg…Read more
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65Subjects, intelligibility, and historyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 28 (1-4): 273-287. 1985.
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1Early Heidegger on Being, the Clearing, and Realism in Heidegger (1889-1989)Revue Internationale de Philosophie 43 (168): 80-102. 1989.
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178This book develops an original Heideggerian account of the timespace and indeterminacy of human activity while describing insights that this account provides into the nature of activity, society and history. Drawing on empirical examples, the book argues that activity timespace is a key component of social space and time, shows that interwoven timespaces form an essential infrastructure of social phenomena, offers a novel account of the existence of the past in the present, and defends the teleo…Read more
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2Raimo Tuomela, The Philosophy of Social Practices: A Collective Acceptance View Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 23 (6): 409-411. 2003.
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152Nature and technology in historyHistory and Theory 42 (4). 2003.This essay sketches an expanded theoretical conception of the roles of nature and technology in history, one that is based on a social ontology that does not separate nature and society. History has long been viewed as the realm of past human action. On this conception, nature is treated largely as an Other of history, and technology is construed chiefly as a means for human fulfillment. There is no history of nature, and the history of technology becomes the history of useful products. The essa…Read more
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54Where times meetCosmos and History 1 (2): 191-212. 2005.This essay pursues two goals: to argue that two fundamental types of time—the time of objective reality and “the time of the soul”—meet in human activity and history and to defend the legitimacy of calling a particular version of the second type a kind of time. The essay begins by criticizing Paul Ricoeur’s version of the claim that times of these two sorts meet in history. It then presents an account of human activity based on Heidegger’s Being and Time, according to which certain times of the …Read more
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164The Site of the Social: A Philosophical Account of the Constitution of Social Life and ChangePennsylvania State University Press. 2002.Inspired by Heidegger’s concept of the clearing of being, and by Wittgenstein’s ideas on human practice, Theodore Schatzki offers a novel approach to understanding the constitution and transformation of social life. Key to the account he develops here is the context in which social life unfolds—the "site of the social"—as a contingent and constantly metamorphosing mesh of practices and material orders. Schatzki’s analysis reveals the advantages of this site ontology over the traditional individu…Read more
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