• The social constitution of action: Objectivity and explanation
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 20 (2): 195-207. 1990.
    It is argued in this article that human actions may be said to be socially constituted : as being behavior that is constituted as human action by social relations and by participant agent and collective representations of behavior. In contrast to recent social constructionist accounts, it is argued that the social constitution of action does not pose any threat to the objectivity of classification or explanation in social psychological science. It does mark some significant ontological differenc…Read more