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On phenomenology and social relations selected writings
1970
by
Schütz
Phenomenology
Ideal Type
Edmund Husserl
Max Weber
Verstehen
Rationality
Determinism
Egalitarianism
Positivism
Methodology
Division of Labor
Anthropology
Eric Voegelin
John Locke
Thomas Hobbes
Aristotle
Vilfredo Pareto
Teleology
Interest Rates
Valuation
Plato
Subjective Value
Expectations
Epistemology
Human Action
Fritz Machlup
Oligopoly
Methodological Individualism
Social Justice
Classical Economics
Table of Contents · 148 segments
1
Front Matter and Table of Contents
chapter
2
Acknowledgments
chapter
3
Introduction I: The Work of Alfred Schutz
essay
4
Introduction II: Points of Departure
essay
5
Introduction III: Framework of Schutz’s Phenomenological Sociology
essay
6
Outline: The Province of Sociology
theoretical
7
Phenomenological Foundations in Schutz’s Sociology
theoretical
8
The Social Prestructuring of the Life-World and the Stranger
theoretical
9
Objectivity, Language, and Meaning Vehicles
theoretical
10
Marks, Indications, Signs, and Symbols
theoretical
11
Relevance: Imposed, Volitional, Motivational, Thematic, and Interpretational
theoretical
12
Zones of Relevance, Typification, and the Definition of the Situation
theoretical
13
Action, Motivation, Projects, and Rationality in the Life-World
theoretical
14
Projecting, Freedom, Choice, and Social Action
theoretical
15
Intersubjectivity, the Alter Ego, and Subjective Understanding
theoretical
16
Reciprocity, We-Relations, and Everyday Observation
theoretical
17
Intercommunication and Mutual Tuning-In
theoretical
18
Indirect Social Relationships and the Social Distribution of Knowledge
theoretical
19
Realms of Experience and Finite Provinces of Meaning
theoretical
20
Sociology as a Province of Meaning
theoretical
21
Sociology Makes Sense: Schutz’s Contribution
theoretical
22
Phenomenological Baseline: Focus on Phenomenology
chapter
23
Phenomenology and the Social Sciences
essay
24
Consciousness, Intentionality, and Phenomenological Reduction
essay
25
Experience as Stream of Consciousness
essay
26
Meaningful Experience and Retrospection
essay
27
Meaning-Endowed Conduct
essay
28
Attention to Life and Wide-Awakeness
essay
29
Acting in the Outer World
essay
30
The Life-World: The World of the Natural Attitude
chapter
31
Biographically Determined Situation
chapter
32
Stock of Knowledge
chapter
33
The Character of Practical Knowledge
chapter
34
Opening of Part II: The Cognitive Setting of the Life-World
chapter
35
The Social Conception of the Community and the Individual: The Social World Taken for Granted
theoretical
36
Self-Interpretation of the Cultural Community
theoretical
37
The Subjective Meaning of Group Membership
theoretical
38
Outside and Inside Perspectives: Out-Group View and In-Group View
theoretical
39
The Stranger in the Community
theoretical
40
The Insider’s View and the Stranger’s Orientation
theoretical
41
The Objective Meaning of Group Membership
theoretical
42
Social Means of Orientation and Interpretation: Language and Social Knowledge
theoretical
43
Language in the Context of Culture
theoretical
44
Marks
theoretical
45
Indications
theoretical
46
Signs and Sign-Systems
theoretical
47
The Objective Meaning of Sign Systems
theoretical
48
Expressive Function of Signs
theoretical
49
Selective Attention: Zones of Relevance
theoretical
50
Social Domains of Relevance
theoretical
51
Formal Properties of Domains of Relevance
theoretical
52
The Typification of Objects
theoretical
53
Naming and Typifying
theoretical
54
Experience and Typification
theoretical
55
Typification in Social Life
theoretical
56
Systems of Relevance and Typification
theoretical
57
Acting in the Life-World: Transitional Fragment
theoretical
58
Acting and Planning: Conduct, Action, and Working
theoretical
59
Motivation: In-Order-To and Because Motives
theoretical
60
Conscious Action and the Projected Act
theoretical
61
What Is Rational Conduct?
theoretical
62
Planning and Rational Choice
theoretical
63
Anticipating and Projecting: Anticipation and Typification
theoretical
64
Anticipation of Things to Come
theoretical
65
Projecting
theoretical
66
Fancying and Projecting
theoretical
67
Projection and Interest
theoretical
68
Foresight and Hindsight
theoretical
69
Freedom, Choice, and Interest: Man as Free Actor
theoretical
70
Choice and Action
theoretical
71
Choice and Interest
theoretical
72
Intentional Action
theoretical
73
Doubting and Questioning
theoretical
74
Problematic and Open Possibilities
theoretical
75
Choosing Among Objects
theoretical
76
Choosing Among Projects and Transition to Interactional Relationships
theoretical
77
Intersubjectivity and the Natural Attitude
theoretical
78
Fellow Men Taken for Granted
theoretical
79
Appresentation of the Other
theoretical
80
The Communicative Common Environment
theoretical
81
The General Thesis of the Alter Ego
theoretical
82
Understanding Another Person
theoretical
83
Genuine Subjective Understanding
theoretical
84
Expressive Action and Expressive Movement
theoretical
85
Motivational Understanding
theoretical
86
Reciprocity of Perspectives
theoretical
87
We-Relationship: Face-to-Face Situation and Thou-Orientation
theoretical
88
Pure We-Relationship and Mutual Awareness
theoretical
89
Conversation in the We-Relationship
theoretical
90
Face-to-Face Relationships, Directness, and Common Environment
theoretical
91
Reciprocal Witnessing and Motivational Contexts
theoretical
92
Social Observation: Direct Observation, Interpretation, and the Observer
theoretical
93
Interpersonal Communication: Signs, Appresentation, and Shared Relevances
theoretical
94
Linguistic, Oral, Gestural, and Visual Communication
theoretical
95
Musical Communication: Composer and Beholder
theoretical
96
Musical Communication: Performer and Listener
theoretical
97
Musical Communication: Making Music Together
theoretical
98
Tuning In and Transition to Indirect Social Relationships
theoretical
99
Indirect Social Relationships: Mediate Relationships with Contemporaries and Derived Time Perspectives
theoretical
100
From Direct to Indirect Social Experience
theoretical
101
Regions of Anonymity in the World of Contemporaries
theoretical
102
Mediate Experience of Contemporaries
theoretical
103
They-Orientation as Indirect Other-Orientation
theoretical
104
Personal Ideal Types and Functional Anonymity
theoretical
105
Anonymity of the Contemporary
theoretical
106
Social Relationships Between Contemporaries
theoretical
107
II. Predecessors and Successors: World of Predecessors
theoretical
108
World of Successors
theoretical
109
Distribution of Knowledge: Incomplete and Piecemeal Knowledge
theoretical
110
World within Common Reach
theoretical
111
Social Distribution of Knowledge and Anonymous Modernity
theoretical
112
Expert, Man in the Street, and Well-Informed Citizen
theoretical
113
V. Realms of Experience: Garbled Transition on Expertise and Reference
theoretical
114
Transcendences and Multiple Realities: The Experience of Transcendence
theoretical
115
Symbol
theoretical
116
The Roots of Symbolism
theoretical
117
Provinces of Meaning
theoretical
118
Paramount Reality and Its Cognitive Style
theoretical
119
Transitions, Nonparamount Realities, and Worlds of Phantasy
theoretical
120
Province of Scientific Reasoning
theoretical
121
VI. The Province of Sociology: Transition to Interpretative Sociology
theoretical
122
I. Basic Considerations: Limits of the Behaviorist Position
theoretical
123
The Objective and the Subjective Approach
theoretical
124
On the Unity of the Sciences
theoretical
125
The Basic Subject Matter of Sociology
theoretical
126
Sociology of Understanding
theoretical
127
Subjective Interpretation
theoretical
128
The Stance of the Sociological Observer
theoretical
129
Formation of Sociological Constructs
theoretical
130
Sociological Relevance
theoretical
131
Postulates for the Construction of Concepts of Human Action
theoretical
132
Models of Rational Action
theoretical
133
Why Ideal Types of Subjective Conduct?
theoretical
134
Kinds of Ideal Types
theoretical
135
Personal Type and Course-of-Action Type
theoretical
136
The Ideal-Typical Puppet
theoretical
137
Habitual Ideal Type
theoretical
138
Ideal Types of Collectives
theoretical
139
Ideal Types of Languages, Cultural Objects, and Their Application
theoretical
140
Sociological Inquiries: The Homecomer
essay
141
Equality and Opportunity
essay
142
Epilogue: Social Science Makes Sense
essay
143
Glossary of Selected Terms
theoretical
144
Bibliography of the Writings of Alfred Schutz
bibliography
145
Bibliography of Alfred Schutz: Books
bibliography
146
Bibliography of Alfred Schutz: Papers and Essays
bibliography
147
Bibliography of Alfred Schutz: Unpublished Works
bibliography
148
Publisher Back Matter: Heritage of Sociology Series
essay