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;ONE, THE FOUNDATIONS OF KNOWLEDGE IN EVERYDAY LIFE &!-- Starts at p. 33 in 1991 edition--X (en) |
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;PREFACE (en) |
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;INTRODUCTION (en) |
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The Social Construction of Reality, 1966 (en) |
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Peter_L._Berger
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;TWO, SOCIETY AS OBJECTIVE REALITY &!-- Starts at p. 63 in 1991 edition--X (en) |
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;THREE, SOCIETY AS SUBJECTIVE REALITY &!-- Starts at p. 147 in 1991 edition--X (en) |
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Society... directly penetrates the organism in its functioning, most importantly in respect to sexuality and nutrition. While both sexuality and nutrition are grounded in biological drives, these drives are extremely plastic in the human animal. Man is driven by his biological constitution to seek sexual release and nourishment. But his biological constitution does not tell him where he should seek sexual release and what he should eat. (en) |
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qkg:Context19098
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