1st Edition

Magic, Science and Society

By Alex Dennis Copyright 2024
140 Pages
by Routledge

140 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

Magic, Science and Society investigates the way the ‘rationality debate’ has developed over the last century, from E.E. Evans-Pritchard’s study of Azande magic, through Peter Winch’s argument that there can be no such thing as a social science, across the arguments about the proper status of science in the 1970s and 1980s, to the ‘epistemological’ and ‘ontological’ turns of the early... Read more

Introduction

1. Understanding magic

2. The implications of magic

3. A social science?

4. The ‘rationality debate’

5. Redefining rationality

6. Is that what you want ‘cause that’s what’ll happen

Conclusion: Opportunities lost

Biography

Alex Dennis is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Sheffield, UK, where he also leads the BA Sociology programme. His research explores theories of rationality, ethnomethodology and conversational analysis, ethnographic methodologies, workplace and organisational studies, sociologies of knowledge, social interaction and social order perspectives. He is the author of Making Decisions about People: The Organisational Contingencies of Illness (Routledge, 2001), co-author of Perspectives in Sociology (Sixth Edition, Routledge, 2015) and co-editor of Human Agents and Social Structures (2010).