Double Contingency of Communication
Following Talcott Parsons and Niklas Luhmann, the double contingency of communication refers to the fact that in orientation you can never have a totally reliable knowledge of your interlocutor. Individuals are black boxes as their different standpoints are never fully transparent to one another. Since your interlocutor’s statements can always differ from what you expect, communication is contingent; it is doubly contingent as far as both anticipate this when speaking with each other. To allow continuity in communication nonetheless, one will try all the more to respond in such a way as to provide the other with an opportunity to respond in an expected way. As double contingency must be mastered in ever-new circumstances in ever-new ways, it does not seem helpful to presume certain predefined commonalities like truthfulness or willingness for consensus. Rather, orientation tries to stay connectable for others, uses diplomacy of signs , builds trust, and thus allows leeways for alternatives which are not preemptively decidable (chap. 10.5).
130-135, 141, 152-153, 156-157, 159, 168, 186-188, 208, 216, 239, 241, 243, 256, 272
Glossary
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2019
- Dec 12, 2019 Attention
- Dec 11, 2019 Calmness
- Dec 10, 2019 Certainty/Uncertainty
- Dec 9, 2019 Courage
- Dec 8, 2019 Death
- Dec 7, 2019 Digitization
- Dec 6, 2019 Double Contingency of Communication
- Dec 5, 2019 Ethical Orientation
- Dec 4, 2019 Fluctuance
- Dec 3, 2019 Foothold
- Dec 2, 2019 Horizon
- Dec 1, 2019 Identity
- Nov 30, 2019 Irritation
- Nov 29, 2019 Leeway
- Nov 28, 2019 Metaphysics
- Nov 27, 2019 Moral Orientation
- Nov 26, 2019 Orientation
- Nov 25, 2019 Orientation Worlds
- Nov 24, 2019 Paradox
- Nov 23, 2019 Perspective
- Nov 22, 2019 Plausibility
- Nov 21, 2019 Routine
- Nov 20, 2019 Sign
- Nov 19, 2019 Situation
- Nov 18, 2019 Standardization
- Nov 17, 2019 Standpoint
- Nov 16, 2019 Time
- Nov 15, 2019 Unsettlement
- Nov 14, 2019 View