Call for papers Synthese Topical Issue

Deadline: 4 April 2022

 

The meta-metaphysics of social ontology

 

Guest-Editors: Esa Diaz-Leon, Francesco Guala, Harold Kincaid, Raphaël Künstler

 

Our lives are oriented not only towards natural, but also social entities: 
Institutions, marriages, firms, classes, genders, races, and so on. The social 
sciences investigate how all these interact with each other and with individual 
people. Political struggles generally aim at transforming these social 
entities: What rules should govern a fair society? What are the legitimate 
constitutive parts of a marriage? How should different contributions to a firm 
be differentially compensated?

 

Despite their centrality to our ordinary, scientific, and political lives, 
social entities remain metaphysically mysterious. What are their fundamental 
constituents? Are social entities sui generis? How to locate these entities and 
their properties within the natural world? Should they be eliminated, reduced 
or regarded as primitive?

 

Social ontology is now a rapidly growing field of investigation, attracting the 
attention of more and more metaphysicians with very different approaches. To 
build a good social ontology, some authors think it suffices to rely on the 
standard tools of analytical philosophy: conceptual analysis, intuition, 
thought experiments, formalization, grounding. Others contend that social 
ontology should be informed by the social sciences.  Still others argue that 
social ontology is a form of descriptive metaphysics, while others believe, 
that the specificity of social entities requires an “ameliorative conceptual 
analysis”. This increasing diversity of approaches raises a concern: if we 
cannot agree on how even to practice social ontology, our current efforts will 
be at cross-purposes.

 

Following Ross and Ladyman’s vigorous attack on traditional metaphysics in 
favor of a scientific metaphysics, meta-metaphysics itself has become a lively 
field of philosophical debate. Many ways of articulating science and 
metaphysics have been proposed: Among others, neo-positivist metaphysics, 
metaphysics as modeling, moderately naturalized metaphysics, and metaphysics as 
a kind of toolbox. The meta-metaphysical value of grounding theory is the topic 
of much discussion, but also the relation of metaphysical inquiry to common 
sense and normative (including religious) beliefs.

 

In short, it seems now both urgent and possible to discuss the ways 
meta-metaphysics can be applied to social ontology in order to help it to 
produce philosophically, scientifically and politically better results.

 

Appropriate topics for submission include, among others:

 

·       Do current meta-metaphysical debates apply to social ontology? If yes, 
how? If no, why?

 

·       What are the various kinds of social ontologies on offer?

 

·       What is the relation between social ontology and the social sciences? 
Can social ontology help the social sciences to overcome their disagreements? 
Should social ontology be naturalized? If yes, how should this naturalization 
be conceived?

 

·       Are descriptive social ontology and descriptive natural ontology 
methodologically identical? Can a social ontology be revisionist? If yes, what 
is the relation between descriptive and revisionist social ontologies?

 

·       What is the relation between social ontology and political struggle?

 

·       Can the conceptual and formal tools (supervenience, grounding, etc.) 
used in the philosophy of nature or in the philosophy of mind be applied also 
to social ontology?

 

·       What meta-metaphysical lessons could be drawn from the history of 
social ontology and the social sciences?

 

·       Many debates in social ontology, such as questions about the nature of 
gender, race, sexual orientation, disability, and so on, are politically 
significant precisely because these human traits are the target of 
discrimination. Is this normative dimension of social ontology relevant with 
regards to questions about the meta-metaphysics of social ontology?

 

Manuscripts should be submitted via Synthese Editorial Manager: 
www.editorialmanager.com/synt <http://www.editorialmanager.com/synt> between 
December 1, 2021, and April 4, 2022.

 

 

For further information, please contact Raphaël Künstler

raphael.kunstler [at] univ.tlse2.fr

 
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