A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Three Senses of "Emergence" – On the Term's History, Functions, and Usefulness in Social Theory
Subtitle: On the Term's History, Functions, and Usefulness in Social Theory
Authors: Piiroinen Tero
Publication year: 2014
Journal: Prolegomena
Volume: 13
Issue: 1
First page : 141
Last page: 161
Number of pages: 21
ISSN: 1333-4395
eISSN: 1846-0593
Web address : http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=180414
The term emergence, or irreducibility, has been used in a great variety of senses over the years, and different senses are useful in different discursive contexts. In this paper the focus is on one specific context, that of methodologically oriented social theory, and the question to answer is, what might be the most useful sense(s) of emergent irreducibility in that field? To answer that question, key intuitions of emergence are first abstracted from the concept’s history. Three main senses of the term are distinguished based on those different intuitions. Then the likely linguistic functions of emergence in each of those main senses are gauged in social theory and methodology. It is argued that one of the senses – here called “contingently epistemological irreducibility” – is in fact more useful as regards social scientific methodology than the others.