ABSTRACT

This book departs from approaches to truth in social science and ideas in philosophy that connect truth to the ability of language to fulfil certain ‘real-world’ conditions of objectivity. Pointing to an extra-linguistic level in our cognition at which scientific creativity occurs, it highlights the manner in which epistemic communities share, work on and modify not only the world-imaginaries that they endorse, but also those world-views that they reject or which partially overlap with their own. Through the concept of the social imaginary, the author explores the theoretical interrelations among various metaphysical world-imageries by which we organise our scientific understanding of the world and our expectations of experience, thus shedding light on the manner in which social ontology can inform our practices of sharing belief. A study at the intersection of metaphysics and social theory, The Fundamental Predicament of Contemporary Philosophy and the Social Sciences will appeal to scholars of sociology and philosophy with interests in questions of ontology and epistemology.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction to the Predicament

chapter 2|14 pages

Language and Metaphysics

Outline of a Radical Critique

chapter 4|17 pages

De-naturalising the Ontological Discourse

chapter 5|42 pages

Socialising Metaphysics

chapter 6|20 pages

Tracing and Reappraising the Imaginary

chapter 8|26 pages

Sociologising Metaphysics

chapter 9|6 pages

Conclusion