Material Parts in Social Structures

There has been much debate on whether and how groups of human agents can constitute social structures with causal significance. Both sides in this debate, however, implicitly privilege human individuals over non-human material objects and tend to ignore the possibility that such objects might also p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elder-Vass Dave
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-02-01
Series:Journal of Social Ontology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jso-2015-0058
id doaj-8d6220f7c834454fa6fbc50c354a1419
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8d6220f7c834454fa6fbc50c354a14192021-09-06T19:40:53ZengDe GruyterJournal of Social Ontology2196-96552196-96632017-02-01318910510.1515/jso-2015-0058jso-2015-0058Material Parts in Social StructuresElder-Vass Dave0Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandThere has been much debate on whether and how groups of human agents can constitute social structures with causal significance. Both sides in this debate, however, implicitly privilege human individuals over non-human material objects and tend to ignore the possibility that such objects might also play a significant role in social structures. This paper argues that social entities are often composed of both human agents and non-human material objects, and that both may make essential contributions to their causal influence. In such cases the causal influence of social structures should be attributed to the emergent causal powers of what I call socio-technical entities.https://doi.org/10.1515/jso-2015-0058causal powerscritical realismdistributed cognitionsocial structuresociomaterialitysocio-technical systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elder-Vass Dave
spellingShingle Elder-Vass Dave
Material Parts in Social Structures
Journal of Social Ontology
causal powers
critical realism
distributed cognition
social structure
sociomateriality
socio-technical systems
author_facet Elder-Vass Dave
author_sort Elder-Vass Dave
title Material Parts in Social Structures
title_short Material Parts in Social Structures
title_full Material Parts in Social Structures
title_fullStr Material Parts in Social Structures
title_full_unstemmed Material Parts in Social Structures
title_sort material parts in social structures
publisher De Gruyter
series Journal of Social Ontology
issn 2196-9655
2196-9663
publishDate 2017-02-01
description There has been much debate on whether and how groups of human agents can constitute social structures with causal significance. Both sides in this debate, however, implicitly privilege human individuals over non-human material objects and tend to ignore the possibility that such objects might also play a significant role in social structures. This paper argues that social entities are often composed of both human agents and non-human material objects, and that both may make essential contributions to their causal influence. In such cases the causal influence of social structures should be attributed to the emergent causal powers of what I call socio-technical entities.
topic causal powers
critical realism
distributed cognition
social structure
sociomateriality
socio-technical systems
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jso-2015-0058
work_keys_str_mv AT eldervassdave materialpartsinsocialstructures
_version_ 1717767598150516736