ABSTRACT

Durkheim's sociological thought is based on the premise that the world cannot be known as a thing in itself, but only through representations, rough approximations of the world created either individually or collectively. This set of papers by leading Durkheimians from Britain, America and continental Europe is the first concentrated attempt to understand what he meant by representations, how his understanding of the term was influenced by Kant and by neo-Kantians like Charles Renouvier and how his use of the concept in his work developed over time. By arguing that his use of representations at the the core of Durkheim's sociological thought, this book makes a unique contribution to Durkheimian studies which have recently been dominated by positivist and functionalist interpretations, and reveals a thinker very much in tune with contemporary developments in philosophy, linguistics and sociology.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|16 pages

The Intellectual Territory

chapter 1|14 pages

Representations as Understood by Durkheim

An introductory sketch

part II|56 pages

Historical issues

chapter 2|10 pages

Representations in Durkheim's sens lectures

An early approach to the subject

chapter 3|22 pages

Representations in Durkheim's Masters: Kant and Renouvier

I: Representation, reality and the question of science

chapter 4|22 pages

Representation in Durkheim's Masters: Kant and Renouvier

II: Representation and logic

part III|56 pages

Specific issues

chapter 5|15 pages

A Change in Ideas

Collective consciousness, morphology, and collective representations 1

chapter 6|20 pages

What do Representations Represent?

The issue of reality

chapter 7|19 pages

Representation and Belief

Durkheim's rationalism and the Kantian tradition