Berger & Luckmann: The Social Construction of Reality — Complete Visual Study Guide

Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's 1966 masterpiece showed how everyday reality — institutions, money, gender, law — is built through human activity and sustained through socialisation. This visual study guide covers all three moments, institutionalisation, legitimation, reification, and socialisation for UPSC, NET-JRF, A-Level, AP Sociology, IB, and GRE students.

Berger and Luckmann: The Social Construction of Reality Explained | IASNOVA
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SCoR · 1966

§ Sociological Theory · Sociology of Knowledge

The Social Construction of Reality

Berger & Luckmann on How Society Builds the World We Take for Granted

The everyday reality that feels solid, natural, and obvious is in fact built — assembled and maintained through human activity. Berger and Luckmann showed how society is at once our product and an objective reality that produces us, in an endless dialectical loop.

For Students Of: Sociological Theory Reading Time: 33 min Updated: 2026

▦ Built for Sociology Students Worldwide

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▦ Key Takeaways

The Theory in 90 Seconds

  • The Core Idea: The everyday reality we take for granted is not natural or fixed but is socially constructed — built and sustained through ongoing human interaction.
  • The Three Moments: Reality is continuously produced through a dialectic of externalisation (we create the social world), objectivation (it confronts us as an objective reality), and internalisation (we absorb it back into ourselves).
  • The Famous Formula: “Society is a human product. Society is an objective reality. Man is a social product.” All three are true simultaneously.
  • Institutionalisation: Reality gets built through habitualisationtypificationinstitutions — repeated actions harden into objective social structures.
  • Legitimation & Reification: Institutions are justified through legitimation; when we forget we made them and treat them as natural facts, that is reification.
  • Socialisation: We internalise reality through primary socialisation (childhood, the foundational world) and secondary socialisation (later, into specialised sub-worlds).
  • Why It Matters: Published in 1966, the book founded modern social constructionism and the sociology of knowledge — shaping how we understand everything from gender and race to money and nations as human constructions.

Reality Is Built, Not Given

In 1966, two sociologists published a slim book with an audacious claim: the reality we live in — the institutions, roles, meanings, and “facts” we take completely for granted — is not natural, eternal, or god-given. It is constructed by human beings, brick by brick, through ongoing social interaction. Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann’s The Social Construction of Reality became one of the most influential sociology books of the twentieth century and founded the modern field of social constructionism.

▦ Featured Definition

The social construction of reality is the theory that the everyday reality we take for granted is not natural or fixed but is built and sustained through ongoing social interaction. Society is a human product, yet it confronts individuals as an objective reality, and individuals are in turn shaped by it. This reality is continuously constructed through three dialectical moments — externalisation, objectivation, and internalisation — that together form an endless, self-sustaining loop.

Who Were Berger & Luckmann?

Two émigré sociologists, shaped by the phenomenological tradition of Alfred Schütz, who combined his philosophy of everyday life with classical sociology to produce a new synthesis: a sociology of knowledge centred on the reality of ordinary, taken-for-granted life.

The Authors

A Lifelong Collaboration

Peter L. Berger (1929–2017), born in Vienna, and Thomas Luckmann (1927–2016), born in Slovenia, were both students of the phenomenological sociologist Alfred Schütz. They met in New York and combined their interests to write their landmark book.

  • Both deeply influenced by Alfred Schütz and the phenomenology of the lifeworld
  • Berger also famous for the sociology of religion (The Sacred Canopy, 1967)
  • Luckmann developed the sociology of knowledge and communication
  • Synthesised Weber (subjective meaning), Durkheim (objective social facts), Mead (the social self), and Marx (consciousness shaped by society)

The Book

A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge

The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge (1966) redefined what the “sociology of knowledge” should study — not abstract ideas and ideologies, but the common-sense knowledge of everyday life.

  • Shifted the sociology of knowledge from elite ideas to everyday common-sense reality
  • Named the 4th most important sociology book of the 20th century by the International Sociological Association
  • Founded modern social constructionism
  • Bridged micro (interaction) and macro (institutions) levels of analysis

Why Does Society Feel So Solid?

The puzzle Berger and Luckmann set out to solve is one we rarely even notice, precisely because the answer feels so obvious. We move through a world of money, marriage, law, jobs, nations, and manners that seems as solid and real as mountains. Yet none of it exists in nature. Where does its solidity come from?

▦ The Founding Question

How can society be a human creation and yet confront us as an objective reality we did not choose?

This is the central paradox. On one hand, society is obviously made by people — there is no money, no marriage, no nation without human beings to create and sustain them. On the other hand, these things feel utterly real and external: you cannot simply decide that money has no value, or that the law does not apply to you. Society presses on us like a hard, objective fact. Berger and Luckmann’s genius was to explain how both can be true at once — how a human product can become an objective reality that then produces humans.

▦ The Sociology of Knowledge, Reframed

Earlier sociology of knowledge (Marx, Mannheim) studied how social position shapes ideas and ideologies — the thought of intellectuals, scientists, and political movements. Berger and Luckmann made a radical move: the sociology of knowledge should study the common-sense “knowledge” of ordinary people — the taken-for-granted reality of everyday life. Because it is this everyday knowledge, not abstract theory, that actually constructs the social world for the vast majority of people. “Reality” for the sociologist is whatever people treat as real.

The Dialectic of Society

Berger and Luckmann compressed their entire theory into three deceptively simple propositions. These three statements, all true at once, capture the dialectical relationship between human beings and the social world they build.

1

Society is a human product.

Through externalisation — we create it

2

Society is an objective reality.

Through objectivation — it confronts us

3

Man is a social product.

Through internalisation — it shapes us

▦ A Dialectic, Not a Sequence

These three statements describe a dialectical process — not a one-time sequence with a beginning and end, but a continuous loop that is always happening simultaneously. We are constantly externalising (acting, creating, speaking), the products of our activity are constantly confronting us as objective reality, and we are constantly internalising that reality. Each individual is born into a social world that already exists (objectivated by previous generations), internalises it, and then contributes to externalising and maintaining it for the next. The loop never stops; society exists only as long as the dialectic continues.

The Three Moments

The heart of the theory is the dialectical cycle of three “moments” — three aspects of the single ongoing process by which reality is socially constructed and reconstructed without end.

The Dialectical Construction Cycle

How reality is built, externalised, and absorbed

Moment 1

Externalisation

Human → World

Humans pour their activity, energy and meaning out into the world, producing social products: language, tools, norms, institutions.

Moment 2

Objectivation

World → Objective Fact

These products detach from their makers and confront us as an external, objective reality that seems independent and “out there.”

Moment 3

Internalisation

World → Human

Through socialisation, individuals absorb this objective reality back into consciousness, making it part of their own subjective selves.

↻ The cycle repeats endlessly across generations

▦ Moment 1 · Externalisation

Human beings are biologically “unfinished” — unlike other animals, we have no fixed instinctual environment, so we must build our own world. Externalisation is this ongoing outpouring of human activity into the world. We create language, tools, customs, roles, and institutions. This is a human necessity, not a choice: to be human is to externalise, to produce a social and cultural order to live in.

▦ Moment 2 · Objectivation

Objectivation is the process by which the products of human activity attain the character of objectivity — they come to confront their producers as facts “out there,” external and coercive. Language is the prime example: you did not invent the words you think in; they confront you as a ready-made, objective system. Institutions, once created, take on a life of their own and seem to exist independently of the individuals who sustain them.

▦ Moment 3 · Internalisation

Internalisation is the process by which the objectivated social world is retrojected into consciousness through socialisation — absorbed so deeply that it becomes part of who we are. We do not merely learn the social world; we make it our own, so that its structures become the structures of our own subjective experience. Through internalisation, the individual becomes a member of society — and “man is a social product.”

From Habit to Institution

How exactly does fluid human activity harden into the solid, objective institutions that confront us? Berger and Luckmann traced a precise three-step process by which repeated actions become binding social structures.

1

Habitualisation

Any action repeated frequently becomes cast into a pattern that can then be reproduced with economy of effort. We fall into routines — doing things “the way they are done.” Habitualisation frees us from having to decide everything afresh, but it also begins to narrow our options into established channels.

2

Typification

Habitualised actions become typified — sorted into shared categories of actors and actions. We come to expect that “a person of this type does that kind of thing.” When these reciprocal typifications are shared between actors (“I know what you will do; you know what I will do”), the seed of an institution is planted.

3

Institutionalisation

An institution exists whenever there is a reciprocal typification of habitualised actions by types of actors. Crucially, institutions persist beyond the individuals who created them. To the next generation, the institution is simply there — a hard, historical, objective fact, experienced as having an existence independent of any individual.

▦ The Crucial Generational Shift

The decisive moment comes with the second generation. For the people who first built an institution, its human, constructed origin is still visible — they remember inventing it. But their children inherit the institution as a pre-given fact of the world, with no memory of its construction. As Berger and Luckmann put it, the institutional world is “experienced as an objective reality” with “a history that antedates the individual’s birth.” This is the moment the human product fully becomes an objective reality — and the temptation to reify it begins.

Legitimation — Explaining & Justifying Reality

Once institutions are passed to a new generation that did not create them, they must be explained and justified. Why do things work this way? Why must I obey? The answers a society provides are what Berger and Luckmann call legitimation.

▦ Definition

Legitimation is the process of explaining and justifying the institutional order — making its arrangements appear meaningful, sensible, and right to new members. It answers two questions: “Why are things done this way?” (explanation) and “Why should I do them this way?” (justification). Legitimation builds a “second-order” objectivity over the institutions, weaving them into a coherent, meaningful, and morally compelling whole.

▦ The Four Levels of Legitimation

Berger and Luckmann identified ascending levels. (1) Incipient legitimation: built into language itself — the vocabulary that names things already legitimates them. (2) Rudimentary theoretical propositions: proverbs, maxims, folk-sayings, moral tales. (3) Explicit theories: specialised bodies of knowledge that explain a sector of the institutional order. (4) Symbolic universes: the highest level — overarching frameworks of meaning (religion, science, grand ideologies, cosmologies) that integrate all the institutions into one comprehensive, meaningful reality that covers the entire world and explains everything from birth to death.

▦ Symbolic Universes

The symbolic universe is the master legitimation — the all-encompassing frame of reference that places every institution and every individual experience within a single meaningful order. Religion has historically been the great symbolic universe, locating human life within a cosmic story. When symbolic universes are challenged by alternative views (heresies, rival cultures, new ideologies), societies develop “universe-maintenance” mechanisms — from mythology and theology to therapy and modern science — to defend the official reality against threats.

Reification — Forgetting We Built It

The most consequential idea in the whole theory may be reification — the moment when human beings completely forget that they made the social world, and begin to experience it as a fixed, natural, unchangeable thing entirely beyond their control.

▦ The Key Danger

What happens when we forget that we built reality ourselves?

Reification is the apprehension of human-made phenomena as if they were things — natural facts, laws of nature, results of cosmic law, or expressions of divine will. The reified world is, in Berger and Luckmann’s words, “a dehumanised world” — one the human being experiences “as a strange facticity, an opus alienum over which he has no control rather than as the opus proprium of his own productive activity.” When reality is reified, people forget they are its authors — and so they cannot imagine changing it.

▦ Objectivation vs Reification

The distinction is crucial. Objectivation is necessary and unavoidable — the social world genuinely does confront us as an objective reality, and it must, for society to function. Reification is the extreme, “pathological” form: not merely experiencing the world as objective, but forgetting its human authorship entirely, so that it appears as fixed and natural as the law of gravity. A person can recognise that money or marriage is an objective social fact while still remembering it is a human creation that could be otherwise — that awareness is the antidote to reification.

▦ Why Reification Matters Politically

Reification has powerful political implications, connecting Berger and Luckmann to the Marxist tradition. When social arrangements — class hierarchies, gender roles, racial categories, economic systems — are reified, they appear natural and inevitable (“it’s just human nature,” “that’s the way things are”). This naturalisation makes them seem impossible to change and so protects the status quo. Recognising the social construction of these arrangements — remembering that they are human products, not natural facts — is the first step toward imagining that they could be built differently.

Primary & Secondary Socialisation

Internalisation — the third moment — happens through socialisation. Berger and Luckmann distinguished two phases, and the distinction explains why our earliest social learning feels so much deeper and more unshakeable than anything we learn later.

▦ Phase 1

Primary Socialisation

The first socialisation an individual undergoes in childhood, through which they become a member of society. It happens within the family and other intimate caregivers — the child’s “significant others.”

  • Occurs in early childhood, the most fundamental phase
  • The child has no choice of significant others
  • Internalised with deep emotional attachment — feels like the world, not a world
  • Builds the foundational reality and first language
  • The most resistant to later change

▦ Phase 2

Secondary Socialisation

Any later process that inducts an already-socialised individual into new sectors of the social world — “sub-worlds” with their own specialised knowledge, roles, and vocabularies.

  • Occurs throughout life — school, work, profession, religion
  • Induction into specialised, institutional “sub-worlds”
  • More emotionally detached, more easily changed or shed
  • Built on top of the foundation laid in primary socialisation
  • Learning a profession’s jargon and role is a classic example

▦ Why Primary Socialisation Runs Deeper

Primary socialisation is far more powerful because the child internalises the world of their significant others not as one possible world but as the world — the only world there is. There is no alternative on offer, and it is absorbed with intense emotional attachment to parents and caregivers. Secondary socialisation, by contrast, builds on this base and is recognised as a partial reality — we know our professional role is a role, something we put on and could take off. This is why our deepest sense of reality, identity, and “common sense” was laid down in early childhood and is so very hard to dislodge later in life.

The Social Stock of Knowledge

If reality is built, what is it built out of? The raw material is knowledge — specifically, the shared, taken-for-granted common-sense knowledge that every society accumulates and passes on. Drawing on Alfred Schütz, Berger and Luckmann placed this “stock of knowledge” at the centre of their account.

▦ Definition

The social stock of knowledge is the total accumulated body of common-sense knowledge that a society possesses and transmits — the “recipes” for living, the typifications, the know-how, the taken-for-granted facts about “how things are” and “how things are done.” It is shared, it is socially distributed (different people know different things), and it is handed down across generations. Most of it is held without question — we simply “know” how to behave in a shop, a classroom, a queue, without ever having been formally taught.

▦ The Reality of Everyday Life

Berger and Luckmann argued that the reality of everyday life is the paramount reality — the supreme, taken-for-granted reality in which we spend most of our lives. It is organised around the “here and now,” it is intersubjective (shared with others), and it is simply given — we do not question it, we just live in it. Other “realities” exist (dreams, theoretical physics, religious experience, fiction) but they are bounded “finite provinces of meaning” that we visit and return from; everyday life is the home base of all reality, the reality against which all others are measured.

A Worked Example: Money

To see the whole theory working together, consider something that feels utterly real and objective yet is purely a social construction — money. A banknote is just printed paper; its value exists only because we collectively construct and sustain it.

▦ The Construction of Money

How a Piece of Paper Becomes Real Value

Money is one of the clearest illustrations of the social construction of reality. A banknote has almost no intrinsic worth — it is paper and ink. Yet it can buy food, shelter, and labour. Where does its reality come from? From the three moments, working together.

Externalisation: Human beings created money — inventing the idea that certain tokens could represent and store value, and agreeing to accept them in exchange. Money is a human product, poured out into the world through collective activity.
Objectivation: Once established, money confronts each of us as a hard, objective fact. You cannot decide a banknote is worthless; its value is “out there,” external and coercive. Prices, currencies, and exchange rates feel as real and unyielding as any natural fact. (Institutionalisation: through habit and typification, monetary exchange becomes a settled institution with banks, laws, and roles.)
Internalisation: Through socialisation, we absorb the reality of money so deeply that handling it becomes second nature. A child learns money’s value early; we never question that paper “is” wealth. Money becomes part of our own consciousness and common sense.

And here is the danger of reification: we so completely forget that money is a human convention that we treat it as a natural force — “the market,” we say, “demands” this or that, as if it were a law of physics rather than a human creation we could, in principle, organise differently. The 2008 financial crisis was a vivid reminder that money and markets are constructed realities — when collective confidence (the shared “knowledge” that sustains them) collapses, so does the reality they support. Money is real precisely because — and only as long as — we collectively construct it as real. As the sociological adage (after W.I. Thomas) goes: what people define as real becomes real in its consequences.

Social Constructionism Today

Berger and Luckmann’s framework launched a vast research tradition. The phrase “socially constructed” is now everywhere — and behind it lies their analysis of how human products become objective realities. Here is where the theory does its most important work today.

Application 1

Gender & Sexuality

The claim that gender is “socially constructed” — distinct from biological sex, built through repeated social performance and typification — is a direct descendant of Berger and Luckmann. Gender roles are externalised, objectivated, internalised, and too often reified as “natural.”

Application 2

Race & Ethnicity

Race is now widely understood by sociologists as a social construction rather than a biological reality — a system of categories built historically, objectivated into institutions, and reified into apparent natural fact. The framework explains both its constructedness and its very real consequences.

Application 3

Money, Markets & Nations

Money, financial markets, corporations, and nation-states are paradigm cases of constructed realities — powerful and objective, yet sustained only by collective belief and ongoing human activity. The theory illuminates how such “imagined” realities hold together.

Application 4

Media & Digital Reality

News framing, social media, algorithms, and “post-truth” debates are all about the construction of reality — whose definitions of the situation become the shared, objectivated “knowledge” of a society. The framework is central to media sociology and the study of misinformation.

Challenges to the Theory

For all its influence, the social construction of reality has drawn sustained critique. Each challenge marks a genuine limitation — and the debates they opened remain live in sociology today.

Critique 1 · Power

Whose Construction Wins?

Critics argue the theory underplays power and conflict. Not everyone’s definitions of reality count equally — dominant groups impose their constructions on others. The framework describes how reality is built but says less about whose reality prevails and why.

Critique 2 · Relativism

Is Everything Relative?

If all reality is socially constructed, is there any objective truth at all? Critics worry the theory slides toward relativism, where no account is truer than another — a charge sharpened in “post-truth” debates. Defenders reply that constructedness does not mean “unreal” or “arbitrary.”

Critique 3 · Materiality

What About the Material World?

Some argue the theory over-emphasises meaning and consciousness while neglecting the hard material and bodily realities — biology, economics, the physical environment — that constrain construction. Not everything is equally constructable.

Critique 4 · Agency vs Structure

Too Much Stability?

Some critics feel the model, despite its dialectic, leans toward explaining how reality is maintained and reproduced, with less to say about radical change, resistance, and the conditions under which constructions are overturned.

▦ The Enduring Legacy

Despite these critiques, The Social Construction of Reality remains one of the most influential works in modern social science. It founded social constructionism, reshaped the sociology of knowledge, and gave the discipline an enduring vocabulary — externalisation, objectivation, internalisation, institutionalisation, legitimation, reification. The very phrase “socially constructed,” now woven into everyday intellectual life, is its legacy. Whenever we recognise that something taken as “natural” — gender, race, money, madness, childhood — is in fact a human product that could be otherwise, we are thinking with Berger and Luckmann.

The Memory Device

A four-letter mnemonic locks in the three moments and the danger that follows, for rapid recall under exam pressure.

▦ The Construction of Reality

EOIR

E

Externalisation
(we create it)

O

Objectivation
(it confronts us)

I

Internalisation
(it shapes us)

R

Reification
(we forget we built it)

▦ How to Use It

Remember EOIR as the construction sequence plus its danger. E: externalisation — society is a human product. O: objectivation — society becomes an objective reality. I: internalisation — man becomes a social product. R: reification — the trap of forgetting it was ever built. The first three (EOI) are the dialectical moments; the R is the warning. Pair this with the famous three-line formula — “Society is a human product / Society is an objective reality / Man is a social product” — and the core of the theory is fully recoverable.

Revision Summary

▦ The Twelve Essentials

The Social Construction of Reality in 12 Points

  • The Founding Work: Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann’s The Social Construction of Reality (1966), a treatise in the sociology of knowledge.
  • The Core Idea: Everyday reality is not natural or fixed but socially constructed — built and sustained through ongoing human interaction.
  • The Reframed Sociology of Knowledge: The proper object of study is the common-sense knowledge of everyday life, not just elite ideas and ideologies.
  • The Three-Line Formula: “Society is a human product. Society is an objective reality. Man is a social product.” All three true at once.
  • Externalisation: Humans pour activity and meaning into the world, producing the social world (language, norms, institutions).
  • Objectivation: These products detach and confront us as an external, objective, coercive reality “out there.”
  • Internalisation: Through socialisation, we absorb the objective social world back into consciousness, becoming members of society.
  • Institutionalisation: Habitualisationtypificationinstitutions; reciprocal typifications of habitualised actions become objective structures, especially by the second generation.
  • Legitimation: Institutions are explained and justified across four levels, culminating in overarching symbolic universes (e.g. religion, science).
  • Reification: The “great forgetting” — treating human-made reality as natural, fixed, and beyond human control. The pathological extreme of objectivation.
  • Socialisation: Primary (childhood, foundational, deep, via significant others) vs secondary (later, into specialised sub-worlds, more changeable).
  • Enduring Legacy: Founded modern social constructionism; the framework underpins how we analyse gender, race, money, nations, media, and “post-truth” reality today.

Common Exam Questions Answered

The social construction of reality, the theory of Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann (1966), is the idea that the everyday reality we take for granted is not natural or fixed but is built and sustained through ongoing social interaction. Society is a human product, yet it confronts individuals as an objective reality, and individuals are in turn shaped by it. Reality is continuously constructed through three dialectical moments: externalisation (we create the social world), objectivation (it confronts us as an objective reality), and internalisation (we absorb it back into ourselves through socialisation). The theory founded modern social constructionism and reshaped the sociology of knowledge.
Berger and Luckmann describe three dialectical moments. (1) Externalisation — humans pour their activity and meaning out into the world, creating social products like institutions, language, and norms. (2) Objectivation — these human products take on a life of their own and confront us as an external, objective reality that seems independent of us. (3) Internalisation — through socialisation, individuals absorb this objective social reality back into their own consciousness, making it part of themselves. The three form a continuous dialectical cycle, not a one-time sequence: each is always happening, and corresponds to the formula “society is a human product / society is an objective reality / man is a social product.”
Institutionalisation is the process by which repeated actions become habitualised and then typified into shared patterns that take on the force of social rules. It proceeds in three steps: habitualisation (repeated actions become routine patterns reproducible with economy of effort), typification (actions and actors are sorted into shared categories — “a person of this type does that”), and finally institutions (reciprocal typifications of habitualised actions by types of actors). The decisive feature is that institutions persist beyond the individuals who created them: by the second generation, who inherit them without memory of their construction, they are experienced as objective, historical, binding facts existing independently of any individual.
Reification is the apprehension of human-made social phenomena as if they were natural things, laws of nature, or expressions of divine will — forgetting that people created them. When society is reified, individuals lose awareness that the social world is a human product and experience it as a fixed, unchangeable reality outside human control — what Berger and Luckmann called a “dehumanised world.” Reification is the extreme, pathological form of objectivation: objectivation (experiencing society as objectively real) is necessary and unavoidable, but reification forgets human authorship entirely. This has political force — when class hierarchies, gender roles, or economic systems are reified as “natural” and “inevitable,” they seem impossible to change, which protects the status quo.
The distinction is crucial. Objectivation is the necessary process by which human products (like language and institutions) come to confront us as an objective reality “out there” — this is unavoidable and essential for society to function. Reification is the extreme, “pathological” form: not merely experiencing the social world as objective, but forgetting its human authorship entirely, so it appears as fixed and natural as the law of gravity. The key difference: a person can recognise that money or marriage is an objective social fact while still remembering it is a human creation that could be otherwise — that awareness is the antidote to reification. Objectivation says “this is real and external”; reification says “this is natural, inevitable, and beyond human power to change.”
Primary socialisation is the first socialisation an individual undergoes in childhood, through which they become a member of society. It happens within the family and other intimate caregivers (“significant others”), the child has no choice of these others, and it is internalised with deep emotional attachment — so the child absorbs this world not as one possible world but as the world, the only one there is. It builds the foundational reality and first language and is highly resistant to later change. Secondary socialisation is any later process that inducts an already-socialised individual into new “sub-worlds” — specialised sectors like school, work, profession, or religion, with their own knowledge, roles, and vocabularies. It is more emotionally detached, recognised as partial reality (we know a professional role is a role), built on top of the primary foundation, and more easily changed or shed.
Legitimation is the process of explaining and justifying the institutional order — making its arrangements appear meaningful and right to new members who did not create them. It answers “why are things done this way?” and “why should I do them this way?” Berger and Luckmann identified four ascending levels: (1) incipient legitimation built into language itself (naming legitimates); (2) rudimentary theoretical propositions like proverbs and maxims; (3) explicit theories — specialised bodies of knowledge explaining a sector of the order; and (4) symbolic universes — overarching frameworks of meaning (religion, science, grand ideologies) that integrate all institutions into one comprehensive, meaningful reality covering everything from birth to death. Societies defend symbolic universes against challenges through “universe-maintenance” mechanisms.
Berger and Luckmann redefined the sociology of knowledge. The earlier tradition (Marx, Mannheim) studied how social position shapes ideas and ideologies — the thought of intellectuals, scientists, and political movements. Berger and Luckmann argued that the sociology of knowledge should instead study the common-sense “knowledge” of ordinary people — the taken-for-granted reality of everyday life — because it is this everyday knowledge, not abstract theory, that actually constructs the social world for most people. They drew on Alfred Schütz’s phenomenology of the lifeworld to analyse the “social stock of knowledge” — the accumulated recipes, typifications, and know-how a society transmits. Their famous principle: “reality” for the sociologist is whatever people treat as real, and “knowledge” is whatever people take to be knowledge.
Four main critiques. (1) Power: the theory underplays power and conflict — not everyone’s definitions of reality count equally, and dominant groups impose their constructions on others; it explains how reality is built but less about whose reality prevails. (2) Relativism: if all reality is constructed, is there any objective truth — a worry sharpened in “post-truth” debates, though defenders note constructedness does not mean “unreal” or “arbitrary.” (3) Materiality: it may over-emphasise meaning and consciousness while neglecting hard material, biological, and economic realities that constrain construction. (4) Stability vs change: despite its dialectic, the model leans toward explaining how reality is maintained and reproduced, with less on radical change and resistance. Despite these critiques, the book founded social constructionism and gave sociology an enduring vocabulary; the phrase “socially constructed” is its lasting legacy.
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