Deconstructing Durkheim by Jennifer M. Lehmann
Author:Jennifer M. Lehmann [Lehmann, Jennifer M.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Social Science, Sociology, General
ISBN: 9781136164064
Google: VvJEAQAAQBAJ
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-10-08T04:51:06+00:00
INDIVIDUAL, EMPIRICAL KNOWLEDGE AS IDEOLOGY/COLLECTIVE, RATIONAL KNOWLEDGE AS TRUTH
The object of truth: reality
Durkheimâs most important formulations about the nature of reality are interrelated, and lead directly to his epistemology. He views reality as essential and relational, rather than as existential and substantial.98 There are two levels of reality, and the deeper, more internal, less visible level is the most important, the determinative level. Because he poses this surface/depth, external/internal, appearance/essence, effect/cause, phenomenon/structure dichotomy, he believes that it is impossible to know reality empirically. The abstract is more real and true than the concrete. Concepts, categories, logic and reason must be invoked, to mirror or model the essences and relations which underlie, interconnect, and give meaning and order to, the manifest objects of the universe.
Concepts express reality because they express the essence of things. Conceiving something is, first, âlearning its essential elementsâ, its âgeneral and permanent qualitiesâ.99 The âfunctionâ of concepts is âto express the reality to which they adhereâ. The conceptual idea is âa symbol of a thing and makes it an object of understandingâ. It gives a âfaithful analysis and representation of realityâ because it reflects the factual, the real object: it reflects âthe inherent properties of the object ⦠its natureâ.100 Thus, at the level of individual objects, concepts create âharmonyâ between human minds and âthe nature of thingsâ. The raison dâêtre of the concept is âbeing trueâ, rendering âthings, thought of as adequately as possibleâ.101 Therefore, âthe world expressed by the entire system of conceptsâ is the universe; the real, true, essential universe.
More important than concepts, the categories of logic and reason serve to express universal reality, natural as well as social reality, because they express not individual things in essence, but the more essential relations among things. Conceiving something is, second, âlocating it in its placeâ.102 The categories ârepresent the most general relations which exist between thingsâ. âThe fundamental relations that exist between things â just that which it is the function of the categories to express â cannot be essentially dissimilar in the different realmsâ. Thus, while the categories are a âwork of artâ, that is to say, socially constructed, it is âan art which imitates natureâ.103 Irrationalism is false: the categorical thinking of logic and reason has âobjective realityâ, which is to say that it is based in reality, it accurately reflects reality, it derives from the nature of reality. The rational is the real, the real is rational. The âtrue laws of natureâ, which comprise the ânatural lawâ of the social and physical worlds alike, are âthe regulations according to which facts are really interconnectedâ.104 There is, in fact, and not merely in thought, a ânatural order of thingsâ. This means that âthe phenomena of the universe are bound together by necessary relations, called lawsâ. These necessary relations indicate âthe manner in which things are logically relatedâ, and signify a âuniversal determinismâ. Therefore, Durkheim asserts that: âwhat is natural in this sense of the word, is also rationalâ.105 Nature or reality, or the nature of reality, is rational, which is to say relational.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Spell It Out by David Crystal(36117)
Life for Me Ain't Been No Crystal Stair by Susan Sheehan(35811)
Cecilia; Or, Memoirs of an Heiress — Volume 1 by Fanny Burney(32558)
The Great Music City by Andrea Baker(32019)
Cecilia; Or, Memoirs of an Heiress — Volume 2 by Fanny Burney(31956)
Cecilia; Or, Memoirs of an Heiress — Volume 3 by Fanny Burney(31942)
Professional Troublemaker by Luvvie Ajayi Jones(29662)
The Secret History by Donna Tartt(19088)
We're Going to Need More Wine by Gabrielle Union(19046)
Twilight of the Idols With the Antichrist and Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche(18632)
All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda(16027)
Cat's cradle by Kurt Vonnegut(15355)
Pimp by Iceberg Slim(14507)
For the Love of Europe by Rick Steves(14121)
Bombshells: Glamour Girls of a Lifetime by Sullivan Steve(14075)
Talking to Strangers by Malcolm Gladwell(13370)
Norse Mythology by Gaiman Neil(13365)
Fifty Shades Freed by E L James(13241)
The Social Justice Warrior Handbook by Lisa De Pasquale(12190)