Action
From Geography
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[[Benno Werlen]] critised behavioral geography and believed that action should be fundamental and action should be a starting point not space. Action was defined by [[Max Weber]] as an activity which makes sense. All action has a goal, we do not perform an action unless we have a need and a meaning to do it. In order to make an action have sense we need to see how others actions relate to our own. It is these relations of actions and shared sense that form situations and interactions. An action will always have a motive. | [[Benno Werlen]] critised behavioral geography and believed that action should be fundamental and action should be a starting point not space. Action was defined by [[Max Weber]] as an activity which makes sense. All action has a goal, we do not perform an action unless we have a need and a meaning to do it. In order to make an action have sense we need to see how others actions relate to our own. It is these relations of actions and shared sense that form situations and interactions. An action will always have a motive. | ||
Actions are inter-subjective and it is this joint basis of actions which form [[Life world]]s. | Actions are inter-subjective and it is this joint basis of actions which form [[Life world]]s. | ||
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+ | An Action has different stages as it conducted. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Fist there is a design of action: | ||
+ | * preperatory reflections on values, preferences and affections | ||
+ | * imagination of preffered situation (goal) | ||
+ | * justification of goal in relation to existing value structure | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Secondly there will be: | ||
+ | * The consideration of mean-end relationship | ||
+ | * selection of steps to be taken and means to be used | ||
+ | * estimation of possible disturbance factors and restrictions (structural conditions) | ||
+ | * anticipation of consequences of action | ||
+ | * justification of steps | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Then there is the execution of action: | ||
+ | * consecutive execution of different steps | ||
+ | * reasons of action can be varied, reinterpreted or changed on the way | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | And the finally the effects of the action: | ||
+ | * intended consequenses | ||
+ | * unintended consequenses (Ernste, personal communication, 2012) | ||
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Werlen, B. (2009). Everyday regionalizations. In: International encyclopaedia for Human Geography. Elsevier. | Werlen, B. (2009). Everyday regionalizations. In: International encyclopaedia for Human Geography. Elsevier. | ||
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+ | Ernste, H. (2012). Personal communication, Spatial Action: Classical Action Theories. September 14th 2012. | ||
Published By:--[[User:SamanthaHazlett|SamanthaHazlett]] 16:24, 7 October 2011 (UTC) | Published By:--[[User:SamanthaHazlett|SamanthaHazlett]] 16:24, 7 October 2011 (UTC) |
Revision as of 14:50, 19 October 2012
Benno Werlen critised behavioral geography and believed that action should be fundamental and action should be a starting point not space. Action was defined by Max Weber as an activity which makes sense. All action has a goal, we do not perform an action unless we have a need and a meaning to do it. In order to make an action have sense we need to see how others actions relate to our own. It is these relations of actions and shared sense that form situations and interactions. An action will always have a motive. Actions are inter-subjective and it is this joint basis of actions which form Life worlds.
An Action has different stages as it conducted.
Fist there is a design of action:
- preperatory reflections on values, preferences and affections
- imagination of preffered situation (goal)
- justification of goal in relation to existing value structure
Secondly there will be:
- The consideration of mean-end relationship
- selection of steps to be taken and means to be used
- estimation of possible disturbance factors and restrictions (structural conditions)
- anticipation of consequences of action
- justification of steps
Then there is the execution of action:
- consecutive execution of different steps
- reasons of action can be varied, reinterpreted or changed on the way
And the finally the effects of the action:
- intended consequenses
- unintended consequenses (Ernste, personal communication, 2012)
References
Lipuner, R. & Werlen, B. (2009). Structuration Theory. In: International Encyclopedia for Human Geography. Elsevier.
Werlen, B. (2009). Everyday regionalizations. In: International encyclopaedia for Human Geography. Elsevier.
Ernste, H. (2012). Personal communication, Spatial Action: Classical Action Theories. September 14th 2012.
Published By:--SamanthaHazlett 16:24, 7 October 2011 (UTC)