•  37
    There are now countless social scientific disciplines—listed either as the science of … X … or as an -ology of one kind or another—each with their own internal controversies as to what are their “proper objects of their study.” This profusion of separate sciences has emerged, and is still emerging, tainted by the classical Cartesian-Newtonian assumption of a mechanistic world. We still seem to assume that we can begin our inquiries simply by reflecting on the world around us, and by allowing our…Read more
  •  3
    Rhetoric and the Roots of the Homeless Mind
    Theory, Culture and Society 10 (4): 41-62. 1993.
  •  20
    Living in a Wittgensteinian world: Beyond theory to a poetics of practices
    Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 (3). 1996.
    As human beings, we share many historically developed, language-game interwoven, public forms of life. Due to the joint, dialogically responsive nature of all social life within such forms, we cannot as individuals just act as we please; our forms of life exert a normative influence on what we can say and do. They act as a backdrop against which all our claims to knowledge are judged as acceptable or not. As a result, it is not easy to articulate their inadequacies in a clear and forceful manner…Read more
  •  43
    Dialogical realities: The ordinary, the everyday, and other strange new worlds
    Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 27 (2&3). 1997.
    We tend to seek theoretical explanations of our own human behavior, to understand everything we do as arising, computationally, from a systematic set of simple laws, principles, or rules. Here, influenced by the later Wittgenstein, I argue that the very possibility of the kind of talk we use in our theorizing arises out of the joint or dialogical activities in which we engage in our practical lives together, and only has its meaning within the context of such activities – thus we cannot turn it …Read more