Argyris And Habermas Two Alternatives to Strategic Interpersonal Behavior

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Argyris And Habermas Two Alternatives to Strategic Interpersonal Behavior
Gordon Walker
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Habermas uses the concept of rtile to link speech acts with actions in general. There are three types of rules: operational rules (corresponding to Piaget's (1952) schemes), rules of practice, and rules of action. Operational rules apply to such structures as grammars, logic, algebra, and musical notation. Operational rules constitute but do not cause behavior and are performed unconsciously except in some practices where they are consciously applied. Rules of practice are followed in game play
...ing, for example in chess or football. Games are neither actions nor operations but have features of both; they are the skillful use of operations in social activity for a strategic purpose. Rules of action are followed in instrumental, strategic, and social action.
Norms are complex rules which presuppose a context and can be the reasons which motivate actions. Strategic norms are reducible to the intentions of the actor, whereas social norms are not. In following a social norm an actor fulfills a social expectation shared by the actor's community; the actor reaches a common understanding with another actor if and only if both mutually recognize validity claims with regard to a normative context.


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