Social conventions are those arbitrary rules and norms governing
the countless behaviors all of us engage in every day without
necessarily thinking about them, from shaking hands when greeting
someone to driving on the right side of the road. In this book,
Andrei Marmor offers a pathbreaking and comprehensive philosophical
analysis of conventions and the roles they play in social life and
practical reason, and in doing so challenges the dominant view of
social conventions first laid out by David Lewis.
Marmor begins by giving a general account of the nature of
conventions, explaining the differences between coordinative and
constitutive conventions and between deep and surface conventions.
He then applies this analysis to explain how conventions work in
language, morality, and law. Marmor clearly demonstrates that many
important semantic and pragmatic aspects of language assumed by
many theorists to be conventional are in fact not, and that the
role of conventions in the moral domain is surprisingly complex,
playing mostly an auxiliary and supportive role. Importantly, he
casts new light on the conventional foundations of law, arguing
that the distinction between deep and surface conventions can be
used to answer the prevalent objections to legal
conventionalism.
"Social Conventions" is a much-needed reappraisal of the nature
of the rules that regulate virtually every aspect of human
conduct.
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