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"Definitions in social theory"

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Anonymous Anonymous said...

Interesting that you take up this important issue (thank you at least for that), interesting that you use fascism as your working example, and interesting that socialism is not in your list.

Fascism is a special case, on for that special case I agree that "we can't capture a complex social reality ... through a definition." Maybe that's because fascism isn't a single concept, but a phenomenon with multiple dimension. But I strongly disagree in general.

Consider how mathematics uses the notion of abstraction. If one says "airplane", one doesn't need to consider each of the thousands of parts in a Boeing 747, or distinguish a Boeing 747 from a P51 Mustang. They both fit the abstraction. But some abstractions are better than others. Good definitions are good abstractions in this sense.

There can similarly be very good definitions for, e.g., capitalism and socialism: the former concerns private ownership of property, the latter concerns public ownership of the means of production and distribution. Terms used in these definitions are similarly defined by their own abstractions, e.g., private, public, ownership.

The point is to make this easy, so that a domain of discourse using names for abstract concepts can be agreed upon with disputing what such names means.

Orwell was right, in 1984. But the issue is intent, not meaning. And the problem is that when some definitions are changed, the ideas they express are lost.

It seems to easy to attack socialism by virtue of its historical use, but the same can be done to capitalism and isn't. Nothing has been done in the name of socialism that matches the horrors of the slave trade, which was a pure manifestation of capitalism: ownership of human beings as the private property of others. And that's not difficult. It's just ignored, by and large.

Good definitions exist for many of these concepts. Those good definitions should just be used. Looking for research directions just makes the problems harder - researchers want to find hard insights for personal reasons, and that does more harm than good where definitions are concerned. Try making those problems easier instead, motivated not by how it advances your own careers but how the consensus around a domain of discourse can benefit society. You might surprise yourself at how easy it can be.

February 10, 2012 at 12:32 PM

Blogger Pablo Cáceres said...

Amazing work of systematization. Thanks!

December 10, 2012 at 7:22 PM

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