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Filosofía

Iñigo Ongay: Del oso de las cavernas al Estado Islámico: una breve historia de Dios y la Relición

Iñigo Ongay: Del oso de las cavernas al Estado Islámico: una breve historia de Dios y la Relición





Comento:

Excelente conferencia, y sin embargo:

Entra sólo en determinados aspectos de la religión (por ejemplo no trata para nada su papel de organizador de la moral y de la vida social, su papel político, etc.). Una seria limitación de perspectiva, naturalmente. A la que acompañan otras carencias de perspectiva. Por ejemplo, arguye que con el dios terciario no se puede uno hablar ni comunicarse con el. Pero esto es sólo verdad a medias, pues con ese dios se puede hablar en la modalidad de 'amigo imaginario' o 'amigo invisible', que es una experiencia importante para muchos creyentes. Y es precisamente su invisibilidad (o su inexistencia real) la que le permite la ubicuidad, la plasticidad, etc. que le hace tan útil como maniobra psicológica (de autoengaño, si se quiere) para estos creyentes. Es otra dimensión en la que habría que entrar, aunque no exijo yo que se haga en una conferencia de menos de una hora.

 

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La teatralidad del yo en Adam Smith

viernes, 8 de abril de 2016

La teatralidad del yo en Adam Smith / The Theatricality of the Self in Adam Smith

 

mirrorself
 

 

La Teoría de los sentimientos morales de Adam Smith (1759) es un influyente precursor de las teorías dramatúrgicas del yo desarrolladas por los teorizadores del interaccionismo simbólico o conductismo social. El análisis de la teatralidad del yo en Smith realizado por David Marshall en The Figure of Theater proporciona perspicaces observaciones que deben complementarse situando de modo explícito el dramatismo de Smith en el contexto de teorías del sujeto más recientes, como las desarrolladas por los interaccionistas sociales Charles Cooley, G. H. Mead o Erving Goffman.

The Theatricality of the Self in Adam Smith

Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759) is an influential forerunner of the dramatistic theories of the self developed by symbolic interactionists. David Marshall's analysis of the theatricality of the self in Smith (in The Figure of Theater) provides valuable insights which must be complemented with an explicit interpretation of Smith's dramatism in the context of later theories of the self, such as those developed by social interactionists such as Charles Cooley, G. H. Mead, and Erving Goffman.
 

Number of Pages in PDF File: 10
Keywords: Adam Smith, Self, Subject, Dramatism, Erving Goffman, Theatricality, Morality, Conscience



La teatralidad del yo en Adam Smith
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Teatro Will Durant - The Philosophy of Santayana

Will Durant - The Philosophy of Santayana


Son de no perdérselas, las lecciones de filosofía de Will Durant, en el canal de YouTube de Rocky C. Aquí una panorámica de George o Jorge Santayana. Y aquí toda una serie de audios.








The Philosophy of Spencer
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Homenaje a Secundino Fernández García - Giambattista Vico

Homenaje a Secundino Fernández García - Giambattista Vico

 





Secundino Fernández García, Análisis filosófico de la 'Scienza Nuova' de Giambattista Vico.

Elena Ronzón - Constitución de la Idea moderna de hombre

lunes, 4 de abril de 2016

Elena Ronzon, Constitución de la Idea moderna de hombre

 





Técnicas humanas y analogías cósmicas - Luis Carlos Martín Jiménez

miércoles, 30 de marzo de 2016

Técnicas humanas y analogías cósmicas - Luis Carlos Martín Jiménez








La crítica a la abundancia de "singularidades" y al uso del infinito en las ecuaciones cosmológicas me ha hecho pensar en Smolin y Unger.

Y la idea de que la escritura no proviene del habla, sino del trazo, naturalmente tiene un gran desarrollo en la gramatología de Derrida.

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Searle on Institutions and Power

jueves, 24 de marzo de 2016

Searle on Institutions & Power

From his book The Construction of Social Reality (Penguin, 1995), a work which starts out from the distinction between "brute facts" and "institutional facts" sketched out in Speech Acts:

"The priority of process over product also explains why, as several social theorists have pointed out, institutions are not worn out by continued use, but each use of the institution is in a sense a renewal of that institution. Cars and shirts wear out as we use them but constant use renews and strengthens institutions such as marriage, property, and universities. The account I have given explains this fact: since the function is imposed on a phenomenon that does not perform that function solely in virtue of its physical construction, but in terms of the continued collective intentionality of the users, each use of the institution is a renewed expression of the commitment of the users to the institution. Individual dollar bills wear out. But the institution of paper currency is reinforced by its continual use." (57)

"Now this pattern, the creation of a new institutional fact, usually by the performance of a speech act, where the speech act itself imposes a function on people, buildings, cars, etc., is characteristic of a large number of social institutions. Property, citizenship, licensed drivers, cathedrals, declared wars, and sessions of parliament all exhibit this pattern. The pattern, to put it in a nutshell, is this: We create a new institutional fact, such as a marriage, by using an object (or objects) with an existing status-function, such as a sentence, whose existence itself is an institutional fact, to perform a certain type of speech act, the fact of whose performance is yet another institutional fact." (83-84)

"In general status-functions are matters of power, as we will see in the rest of this chapter. The structure of institutional facts is a structure of power relations, including negative and positive, conditional and categorical, collective and individual powers. In our intellectual tradition since the Enlightenment the whole idea of power makes a certain type of liberal sensibility very nervous. A certain class of intellectuals would rather that power did not exist at all (or if it has to exist they would rather that their favorite oppressed minority had lots more of it and everyone else had lots less). One lesson to be derived from the study of institutional facts is this: everything we value in civilization requires the creation and maintenance of institutional power relations through collectively imposed status-functions. These require constant monitoring and adjusting to create and preserve fairness, efficiency, flexibility, and creativity, not to mention such traditional values as justice, liberty, and dignity. But institutional power relations are ubiquitous and essential. Institutional power—massive, pervasive, and typically invisible—permeates every nook and cranny of our social lives, and as such it is not a threat to liberal values but rather the precondition of their existence. (94)



Planetas errantes, hechos brutos y realidades virtuales

 

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Conversational Realities

martes, 22 de marzo de 2016

Conversational realities

 


John Shotter (Professor of Interpersonal Relations, Dpt. of Communication, U of New Hampshire). Conversational Realities: Constructing Life through Language. (Inquiries in Social Construction). London, Thousand Oaks, New Delhi: SAGE, 1993.*

Converational Realities challenges the traditional scientific view that naturally occurring psychological and sociological 'realities' of a systematic kind are to be discovered underlying appearances. Instead, this book claims that such orderly 'realities' are both socially constructed and sustained within the context of people's disorderly, everyday conversational activities.

John Shotter's interdisciplinary analysis highlights the socially contested but imaginary nature of many of the 'things' we talk about in social life, and illuminates the processes of their 'construction'. He offers a broad-ranging exploration of the rhetorical, argumentative nature of conversational communication, using interesting examples taken from psychotherapy, management and everyday life.

Drawing on psychology, communication studies, anthropology, sociology, history and socio-linguistics, this imaginative and original book will be essential reading for anyone with an interest in current debates across the social and human sciences.


From the reviews:

`I like this book, will recommend it to colleagues and students, and expect it to become a staple citation in articles and books I publish... Sometimes books an academic reads enable a person to make connections among previously disconnected pieces of experience, recurring preferences and passions, and particular life decisions. Reading Conversational Realities accomplished this for me... it is theoretically rich, philosophically thoughtful and experientially evocative' - Human Studies


`[An] immensely thoughtful, informative and persuasive treatment of the "rhetorical-responsive version of social constructionism" via an eclectic blend of, principally, European and American linguistics, philosophy and social psychology... Shotter's book is most important for continuing the work begun by Billig and others bringing recognition via recollection to the rhetorical corpus. He claims to target his recovery of these materials toward psychologists; readers in related disciplines will certainly also benefit' - Discourse & Society

`This book is fascinating... It is important for several reasons. First, it provides an overview of an approach to the social sciences known as social constructionism... Second, Shotter maintains that the fundamental human reality is persons in conversations... Third, Shotter is concerned with practical implications, not just theoretical conceptions' - Studies in Second Language Acquisition

 

 

 Montaigne y la construcción social de la realidad




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