This book by the highly influential philosopher John Searle builds on the provocative and original theory that he first developed in his 1995 book The Construction of Social Reality. Searle asks a fundamental question about human beings: how is it that in a universe of physical objects, facts, and laws, we can also have 'facts' like lawsuits, summer vacations, and presidents? Those facts exist, but not in the same way a mountain or a river exists. How do these very real things become facts, compared with the brute facts of objective reality? Searle's highly original view proposes that these are collective facts, agreed on by all of us, and that we assign existence to these facts by using language - in effect bringings these facts into existence by declaring them to be true. By doing this we create an institutional reality that allows for the creation of governments, universities, marriages, private property, and everything else that forms the basis of our social reality.This important new expression of Searle's latest views in effect is a big-picture explanation of the success of human beings, and will be highly influential across not only philosophy but the academy in general. About the Author: John Searle is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley. |