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The idea of philosophical sociology

This article introduces the idea of philosophical sociology as an enquiry into the relationships between implicit notions of human nature and explicit conceptualizations of social life within sociology. Philosophical sociology is also an invitation to reflect on the role of the normative in social l...

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Main Author: Daniel Chernilo
Format: Default Conference proceeding
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/23324
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author Daniel Chernilo
author_facet Daniel Chernilo
author_sort Daniel Chernilo (1253715)
collection Figshare
description This article introduces the idea of philosophical sociology as an enquiry into the relationships between implicit notions of human nature and explicit conceptualizations of social life within sociology. Philosophical sociology is also an invitation to reflect on the role of the normative in social life by looking at it sociologically and philosophically at the same: normative selfreflection is a fundamental aspect of sociology’s scientific tasks because key sociological questions are, in the last instance, also philosophical ones. For the normative to emerge, we need to move away from the reductionism of hedonistic, essentialist or cynical conceptions of human nature. Sociology needs equally to grasp the conceptions of the good life, justice, democracy or freedom whose normative contents depend on more or less articulated conceptions of our shared humanity rather than on strategic considerations. The idea of philosophical sociology is then sustained on three main pillars and I use them to structure this article: (1) a revalorization of the relationships between sociology and philosophy; (2) a universalistic principle of humanity that works as a major regulative idea of sociological research, and; (3) an argument on the social (immanent) and pre‐social (transcendental) sources of the normative in social life. As invitations to embrace posthuman cyborgs, nonhuman actants and material cultures proliferate, philosophical sociology offers the reminder that we still have to understand more fully who are the human beings that populate the social world.
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spelling rr-article-94792522012-01-01T00:00:00Z The idea of philosophical sociology Daniel Chernilo (1253715) Sociology not elsewhere classified Other human society not elsewhere classified Other language, communication and culture not elsewhere classified Sociology Philosophy Normativity Humanism Human nature Universalism Language, Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified Studies in Human Society not elsewhere classified Sociology This article introduces the idea of philosophical sociology as an enquiry into the relationships between implicit notions of human nature and explicit conceptualizations of social life within sociology. Philosophical sociology is also an invitation to reflect on the role of the normative in social life by looking at it sociologically and philosophically at the same: normative selfreflection is a fundamental aspect of sociology’s scientific tasks because key sociological questions are, in the last instance, also philosophical ones. For the normative to emerge, we need to move away from the reductionism of hedonistic, essentialist or cynical conceptions of human nature. Sociology needs equally to grasp the conceptions of the good life, justice, democracy or freedom whose normative contents depend on more or less articulated conceptions of our shared humanity rather than on strategic considerations. The idea of philosophical sociology is then sustained on three main pillars and I use them to structure this article: (1) a revalorization of the relationships between sociology and philosophy; (2) a universalistic principle of humanity that works as a major regulative idea of sociological research, and; (3) an argument on the social (immanent) and pre‐social (transcendental) sources of the normative in social life. As invitations to embrace posthuman cyborgs, nonhuman actants and material cultures proliferate, philosophical sociology offers the reminder that we still have to understand more fully who are the human beings that populate the social world. 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Conference contribution 2134/23324 https://figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/The_idea_of_philosophical_sociology/9479252 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
spellingShingle Sociology not elsewhere classified
Other human society not elsewhere classified
Other language, communication and culture not elsewhere classified
Sociology
Philosophy
Normativity
Humanism
Human nature
Universalism
Language, Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Studies in Human Society not elsewhere classified
Sociology
Daniel Chernilo
The idea of philosophical sociology
title The idea of philosophical sociology
title_full The idea of philosophical sociology
title_fullStr The idea of philosophical sociology
title_full_unstemmed The idea of philosophical sociology
title_short The idea of philosophical sociology
title_sort idea of philosophical sociology
topic Sociology not elsewhere classified
Other human society not elsewhere classified
Other language, communication and culture not elsewhere classified
Sociology
Philosophy
Normativity
Humanism
Human nature
Universalism
Language, Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Studies in Human Society not elsewhere classified
Sociology
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/23324