Can society learn from experience? Society as a subject

Authors

  • Anna Giza Institute of Sociology, University of the Warsaw

Keywords:

Intentionality, subjectivity, agency, individual, emergentism, society, coordination, aggregation, collective action, action, artefacts, culture

Abstract

The term “society” is usually used as the subject of various statements: “society tends to…”, “society does not trust politicians”, etc. Theoretically, however, individualism prevails both ontologically (“society” is a complex of individual actions) and methodologically. However, there exists a theoretical stance that considers society as an intention-driven agent, a self-reflective subject able to build the structures of self-knowledge. The paper discusses the consequences of adapting the “intentional stance” in the study of society.

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Published

2014-06-06

How to Cite

Giza, A. (2014). Can society learn from experience? Society as a subject. Journal of Public Governance, 29(3), 72–85. Retrieved from https://publicgovernance.pl/zpub/article/view/321