What makes something a social construct is that it is made of society, not by society. The artificial river enables a certain structure of human relations, and that structure of relations is a social construct, not the river itself. — unenlightened
The human custom of swimming for recreation is a pattern of human behaviour; — Srap Tasmaner
So what's the conceptual problem? — unenlightened
You wrote:
One must surely want to say that there are facts of human nature if only that they are social constructers that are not, or not entirely social constructs.
Have we all but eliminated the determining factor(s), which used to be 'X' and 'Y' chromosomes? — creativesoul
That which is existentially contingent upon language, and that which is not.
Isn't that a central consideration? — creativesoul
What I'm getting at, I suppose, is that the notion of social construct is far too vague to be useful. At least, it seems that way to me. If it is underwritten by thought/belief that we cannot get 'beneath' language, it seems that it would be all the more so inclined to arrive at a set of all sets. That is, if we cannot distinguish between our talk and what we talk about in some way or other which allows us to know the differences between our reports and what we're reporting upon, then everything ever spoken and/or written is a social construct.
I think an older critique talked about maps and territories... — creativesoul
Earlier you wrote "of the society" and not "by"...
Not sure I understand that. — creativesoul
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