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(2016) Human Studies 39 (1).

On the social construction of reality

reflections on a missed opportunity

Barry Barnes

pp. 113-125

The paper recalls my response to Berger's and Luckmann's book on reading it shortly after its initial publication. It seeks to convey why it was that I failed to make use of the book at that time, even though I recognised it as an outstanding contribution to my intended field of research, and how later I came to see that this may have been a lost opportunity. The story touches upon diverse important issues including the relationship between epistemology and the sociology of knowledge; the epistemic authority of the natural sciences; the relevance of causal accounting as topic and resource in sociology; the importance of Durkheim in the sociology of knowledge; and the great value of Berger's and Luckmann's book as a corrective to the undue individualism that has long been a feature of the social sciences in the English-speaking world. Even so, the paper is more recollection than analysis, and unreliable recollection at that, after many decades in which there has been time to forget, or even to reconstruct, a very great deal.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-016-9389-1

Full citation:

Barnes, B. (2016). On the social construction of reality: reflections on a missed opportunity. Human Studies 39 (1), pp. 113-125.

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