TY - JOUR TI - Durkheim’s Myth: What Wittgenstein and Ryle Might Have to Say About the Validity of the Basic Concepts of the Social Sciences T2 - The Russian Sociological Review IS - The Russian Sociological Review KW - social theory KW - political theory KW - philosophy of language KW - theory of practices KW - G. Ryle KW - L. Wittgenstein KW - E. Durkheim KW - M. Mauss AB - This paper uses some of the conceptual tools developed by the primary authors of the Oxford-Cambridge tradition in the philosophy of language (especially G. Ryle and L. Wittgenstein) to analyze the "grammar" (in the specific Wittgensteinian sense of the word) of some basic concepts of social sciences such as "reality", "action", "consciousness", etc., having mainly emerged in the language of E. Durkheim’s tradition in social theory. The focus of the paper is the concept of "institution", which still occupies a privileged place in the language of contemporary social sciences. The paper highlights some conceptual problems, logical nonsenses, and philosophical myths embedded in the language of classical social theory coming from the philosophical language of the 19th century that, in turn, had inherited them from the centuries-old tradition of European metaphysics. Due to the specific metaphorical use of concepts, this language may undermine the clarification of reality and hide the real mechanisms of the functioning of institutions and real power relations in certain contexts. The paper also examines the grammar of the concept of "habitus" as introduced by M. Mauss, and argues that some traditional concepts in social theory can be effectively re-interpreted in the methodological perspective of the pragmatic turn in the social sciences ("theory of practices"). AU - Viktor Kaploun UR - https://sociologica.hse.ru/en/2023-22-2/843291325.html PY - 2023 SP - 29-49 VL - 22