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Common Sense “The Social Construction of ‘Common Sense’: A Semiotic Sociological Analysis” J. I. (Hans) Bakker What is Common Sense? Different Strokes for Different Folks • When I asked people what common sense is I got a range of different answers: • “I like to think I have common sense.” • “Common sense is sorely lacking today.” • “Common sense is not very common!” • “Everyone knows what common sense is.” • “Have you read Gramsci?” • “Tom Paine said it all.” The Common People • Lack of much formal education • Attachment to traditional ways of doing things • Religious rituals • Stereotyped views of “outsiders” (“Other”) • Still, however, often very intelligent • Greek hoi polloi • Roman plebeians, plebs, “plebiscite” • “plebe” = new recruit, freshman student • Crude? Coarse? • Are the “Mandarins” more or less likely to show common sense in their decisions? If the common people do not have common sense then who does? • The term is inherently ambiguous. • We tend to think those who agree with us are showing a measure of common sense. • Legal arguments based on common sense tend to be veiled ways of using “rhetoric” • “Jury of one’s peers” originally meant “peers of the realm” and not ordinary citizens (e.g. Conrad Black, British Lord!) • The “dozen” members of a jury comes from astrology! Astrological symbolism is all around us. • Kant’s “a priori synthetic categories” may simply be what we are socialized to believe is common sense (e.g. notions of time, space and causation) It was once believed that it is common sense to acknowledge: • Women are not physically capable of running a marathon since they are the weaker sex; only men can do it. • People who come from Africa are inferior “by nature” and therefore should be considered to be 5/8th of a citizen. • Philosophy should always be a subset of Theology since the axiomatic principles of common sense involve a belief in God. Everything in the Bible is the word of God and therefore one should do everything the Bible tells us to do, including stoning adulterers and not eating lobster. Homosexuality is an abomination. • • • All of human knowledge can be summarized in a small set of axioms. Peirce’s Semiotics helps us to locate the source of the problem • Every “sign” is interpreted by a community of discourse, a scientific or other group. • The words “common sense” are a sign, and nothing but a sign. • What the words really mean is a matter of who is speaking to whom and why. • There is no inherent meaning to any word or set of words. All “sign systems” are in the eyes of their beholders. • To search for one and only one correct meaning is a fruitless task. • Power tends to provide a means for imposing a definition (e.g. Supreme courts, Executives/Kings, teachers) Epistemology • In order to really “know” something we have to know how we know. • The sub-disciplinary field of philosophy that deals with knowledge is called epistemology. (Gk. episteme = knowledge) • In sociological theory we often have implicit epistemological assumptions, but most sociologists are not also, at the same time, professional philosophers. Social Construction • For some the term “social construction” means that EVERYTHING is socially constructed, without exception • For others, the term simply means that many social aspects of life are socially constructed, but there is nevertheless an “obdurate reality” that includes biology. • How the social construction takes place is a topic which is hotly disputed. Is it a matter of individuals’ “definition of the situation”? Or is it a matter of Durkheimian “structures” sui generis? Semiotics: Two Kinds • Ferdinand de Saussure • Signifier (sign) • Signified (object) • Dualistic • Leans on Descartes’ epistemological notion of subjectobject relationships • Charles Sanders Peirce • Interpretant • Sign • Representant • Triadic • Goes beyond Cartesian dualism of subject and object. Rene Descartes’ subject-object dualism Dualistic Epistemology • The “subject” is often thought of as an isolated, billiard ball • There is no “sociological” understanding in Descartes • He does not understand how groups socially construct something • The “object” is always thought of as “objective” • When Galileo as subject looks at the moon as object then that is “objectivity” par excellence! • But much of science does not involve looking at singular objects. Charles Sanders Peirce • America’s greatest philosopher? • Founder of Pragmatism • Founder of Pragmaticism • Founder of American Semiotics • Still being “discovered” Antonio Gramsci • Concept of “hegemony” • Power elite utilizes ideological hegemony to maintain rule • Opposition to Fascism admirable • “common sense” is what the “common people” have when they do not know their true class situation. Class in Itself; Class for Itself! • When the common people (Latin plebeians) recognize their unity as a class “for itself” they can rise up against the oppressive and exploitative elites! • Historical cases do not seem to indicate that this has ever really been the case. • Stasi in East Germany William Shakespeare “Coriolanus” • Like most of the patricians (nobles) Menenius Agrippa has little use for the commoners. • The fools have elected two tribunes (judges) who have incited the commoners (Gk. hoi polloi) against Coriolanus. • Coriolanus has defeated the Volscians at least five times (his name comes from Volscan city of Corioles) • But he is exiled from Rome because he has been contemptious of the common people Coriolanus: Lacking in Common Sense? • My name is Caius Martius, who hath done To thee particularly, and to all the Volsces, Great hurt and mischief; thereto, witness my surname: Coriolanus. Is common sense the sense of the rabble? • The situation in Rome was that of a Republic • The imperial Rome of a later day was also based in part on pleasing the masses with entertainments • “bread and circuses” • Coriolanus was “too proud” to cater to public opinion John Dewey • Pragmatist approach to education • Let kids actually experience working with tangible things • Tendency to still return to subjectobject dualism in his writings • Pragmatism but not Pragmaticism! Medieval Attitude: Pre-Cartesian “One-ness” • “Great Chain of Being” • Pragmatism is an improvement on the Medieval outlook which is still central to idea of a “university” • The idea of a “woman reading”, however, is the exception in Middle Ages in Europe Tom Paine’s Common Sense • There is no real discussion of what common sense is in Tom’s book (1776) • Many things he argues were against Medieval ideas of Kingship, ignoring the slow rise of Constitutional Monarchy Much of Tom Paine is no longer Common Sense! • Paine (2004 [1776]: 66) writes: “The present state of America is alarming to every man who is capable of reflection.” Many would agree when thinking of the U.S. today! But was it true in 1776? • (p. 23) “The nearer any government approaches to a republic the less business there is for a king.” • (p. 73) “…we are not insulting the world with our fleets and armies, nor ravaging the globe for plunder.” Would that it were true today! (It was not entirely true with respect to the Native people in the Americas in the 18th and 19th c…) • Tom Paine did not include women or slaves as having the common sense he was writing about. Is common sense simply good sense? Is good sense reason? • “Good Sense” is also difficult to define, so it begs the question • If common sense were always good sense then perhaps alsmost everyone would almost always be sensible! • In everyday life many people are far from sensible. • “Reason” is also very difficult to define. • As an autonomous Faculty it was regarded by Tom Paine as characteristic of all “Men” (not women) • Sometimes it is not common sense or good sense to be reasonable. Common sense is not all that common • If we think of common sense as sound or good reason and good judgment then there are numerous examples of the opposite in every newspaper every day. • There is as much chance that well educated people will not demonstrate sound common sense and good judgment in their everyday lives as there is that people who have little or no education will not demonstrate sound common sense in their everyday lives. Thomas Sebeok • Well respected semiotician • Interested in zoo- or bio- semiotics • All animals are sentient beings • Even plants respond to signals, which are natural signs (e.g. sunflowers) Seebeok’s “common sense” • While Sebeok’s notion of “signs” of life is heuristic, it is also somewhat beyond what is normally thought of as common sense! • Sebeok’s vision is very ecological, but most people do not think the way he did! Bakker’s IN-S-OR Model • Peirce wrote a great deal and his work is complicated and complex, hard to follow • For pedagogical reasons it is worth trying to simplify some of his key insights • Bakker’s IN-S-OR Model concerns: • Interpretive Networks • Signs • Operationalized Representations The definition of common sense varies among different IN’s • Among some Neo-Marxians Gramsci’s use of the term in The Prison Notebooks would be the correct use. • Among some philosophers the term evokes the Scottish Common Sense School of Philosophy. • Everyday people often think of common sense as a kind of antidote to lofty ideas associated with philosophers and other academics. • There is no one, completely accepted definition of common sense. That is normal. Semiotic analysis of any terms reveals great variety.