RAS Social SciencePsikhologicheskii zhurnal

  • ISSN (Print) 0205-9592
  • ISSN (Online)3034-588X

COLEMAN, COLLINS AND GIDDENS ON THEORY OF ACTION AS THE BASIS OF GENERAL SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY

PII
S0132-16250000392-7-1
DOI
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Volume/ Edition
Volume 394 / Issue 2
Pages
14-23
Abstract

The concept of action occupies a key position in the general sociological theory. According to many theorists – since M. Weber – it is a concept essential to clarifying social reality and social life as a whole. This article compares three approaches to the theory of action which emerged in the last quarter of the twentieth century: the concepts of J. Coleman, R. Collins and A. Giddens respectively. What these share is their accent on the importance of the microsociological perspective for understanding of what is happening on the macro-social level. Where they differ is in the acceptance or rejection of the assumed impact of rationality on human action. Coleman sees people as rational, decisive beings, focussing their actions on the basis of calculating costs and rewards. Collins by contrast stresses supra-rational factors of emotion and routine. Giddens approach is more complex; he explains human action in relation to three levels of consciousness: discursive consciousness, practical consciousness and the unconscious. He also distinguishes three aspects of interaction (communication of meaning, the use of power and moral relationships) with corresponding types of structural elements (interpretative rules, resources and normative rules).

Keywords
sociological theory, social action, interaction, social reality, social structure, micro-level, macro-level, rationality, emotions, routine
Date of publication
01.02.2017
Number of purchasers
23
Views
504

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