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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

184697

Relational ontology being and order out of Heidegger's socioontology

Patrik Aspers

pp. 257-272

Abstract

This chapter addresses the question of ontology. It is an issue on which each scientific theory explicitly or implicitly has a position, as a theory comes with ontological assumptions. I will in this text show that the ontological question, nonetheless, has been neglected. My point is not to make a philosophical argument; instead, I approach the question of ontology by analyzing the more concrete question of order. How order is made and maintained are profound sociological questions.2 Social scientists have studied order, in terms of law and order, and how, for example, institutions, identities, organizations are socially constructed and "ordered" in relation to each other. Social scientists have also discussed the more profound epistemic level of order, or in other words, the ordering principles of things.

Publication details

Published in:

Arendt Fuhse Jan, Mützel Sophie (2010) Relationale soziologie: zur kulturellen Wende der Netzwerkforschung. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 257-272

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-531-92402-1_12

Full citation:

Aspers Patrik (2010) „Relational ontology being and order out of Heidegger's socioontology“, In: J. Arendt Fuhse & S. Mützel (eds.), Relationale soziologie, Dordrecht, Springer, 257–272.