Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
- 1 Social mechanisms: An introductory essay
- 2 Social mechanisms and social dynamics
- 3 A plea for mechanisms
- 4 Real virtuality
- 5 Concatenations of mechanisms
- 6 Do economists use social mechanisms to explain?
- 7 Social mechanisms of dissonance reduction
- 8 Social mechanisms without black boxes
- 9 Is sociological theory too grand for social mechanisms?
- 10 Theoretical mechanisms and the empirical study of social processes
- 11 Monopolistic competition as a mechanism: Corporations, universities, and nation-states in competitive fields
- 12 Rational imitation
- AUTHOR INDEX
- SUBJECT INDEX
4 - Real virtuality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
- 1 Social mechanisms: An introductory essay
- 2 Social mechanisms and social dynamics
- 3 A plea for mechanisms
- 4 Real virtuality
- 5 Concatenations of mechanisms
- 6 Do economists use social mechanisms to explain?
- 7 Social mechanisms of dissonance reduction
- 8 Social mechanisms without black boxes
- 9 Is sociological theory too grand for social mechanisms?
- 10 Theoretical mechanisms and the empirical study of social processes
- 11 Monopolistic competition as a mechanism: Corporations, universities, and nation-states in competitive fields
- 12 Rational imitation
- AUTHOR INDEX
- SUBJECT INDEX
Summary
Inhabitants of two worlds
It is a widespread misconception that social science is about human beings. This is a fallacy that brings to mind the riposte of Henri Matisse when a critic assailed one of his works with the words “This is not a woman – a woman cannot look like that!” To which Matisse responded: “This is not a woman. It is a painting depicting a woman! ” By the same token social scientists may counter if someone asserts that what they describe does not resemble real people: “We do not paint persons – we paint images of persons. ” For sociologists are inhabitants of two worlds: one that is made for them and one that is made by them – one which they construct in order to figure out the one in which they live; they interpret the world they inhabit. By a powerful metaphor, sociologists do so by constructing “mechanisms. ” A mechanism is a set of interacting parts – an assembly of elements producing an effect not inherent in any one of them. A mechanism is not so much about “nuts and bolts” as about “cogs and wheels” (cf. Elster, 1989) – the wheelwork or agency by which an effect is produced. But a mechanism or inner workings is an abstract, dynamic logic by which social scientists render understandable the reality they depict.
Hence a mechanism like, say, the logic of a Prisoner's Dilemma is perfectly general.
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- Information
- Social MechanismsAn Analytical Approach to Social Theory, pp. 74 - 101Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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