Institutions are normative social structures that are collectively accepted. In his book Making the Social World, John R. Searle maintains that these social structures are created and maintained by Status Function Declarations. The article's author criticizes this claim and argues, first, that Searle overestimates the role that language plays in relation to institutions and, second, that Searle's notion of a Status Function Declaration confuses more than it enlightens. The distinction is exposed between regulative and constitutive rules as being primarily a linguistic one: whereas deontic powers figure explicitly in regulative rules, they feature only implicitly in constitutive rules. Furthermore, he contends that Searle's collective accept...
The following considerations belong to what has recently been discussed as “social ontology”. The pa...
In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be...
The paper aims at complementing Searle's social ontology with an epistemology capable of illustratin...
Institutions are normative social structures that are collectively accepted. In his book Making the ...
Hindriks argued that Searle’s theory of institutions suffers from a number of problems pertaining to...
John Searle’s theory of social ontology posits that there are indispensable normative components in ...
AbstractNowadays society is a web of status functions, roles and power. People's main concerns no lo...
The text presents and discusses John Searle’s taxonomy of rule, introducing a new type: the emergent...
Prendendo le mosse dalla tesi di John Searle che le istituzioni sono create e mantenute grazie al ri...
My hypothesis is that we can derive the normative conditions that institutions and institutional ac...
This thesis argues that John Searle's theory of institutional facts, put forth in The Construction o...
There are many issues around rules and related concepts. By developing a theory about the existence ...
In his book, The Construction of Social Reality, Searle sets out to show how complex social phenomen...
John Searle has proposed one of the most influential contemporary accounts of social ontology. ...
In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be...
The following considerations belong to what has recently been discussed as “social ontology”. The pa...
In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be...
The paper aims at complementing Searle's social ontology with an epistemology capable of illustratin...
Institutions are normative social structures that are collectively accepted. In his book Making the ...
Hindriks argued that Searle’s theory of institutions suffers from a number of problems pertaining to...
John Searle’s theory of social ontology posits that there are indispensable normative components in ...
AbstractNowadays society is a web of status functions, roles and power. People's main concerns no lo...
The text presents and discusses John Searle’s taxonomy of rule, introducing a new type: the emergent...
Prendendo le mosse dalla tesi di John Searle che le istituzioni sono create e mantenute grazie al ri...
My hypothesis is that we can derive the normative conditions that institutions and institutional ac...
This thesis argues that John Searle's theory of institutional facts, put forth in The Construction o...
There are many issues around rules and related concepts. By developing a theory about the existence ...
In his book, The Construction of Social Reality, Searle sets out to show how complex social phenomen...
John Searle has proposed one of the most influential contemporary accounts of social ontology. ...
In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be...
The following considerations belong to what has recently been discussed as “social ontology”. The pa...
In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be...
The paper aims at complementing Searle's social ontology with an epistemology capable of illustratin...