Ethnomethodology

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How to read this page: This article maps the topic from beginner to expert across six levels � Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, and Creating. Scan the headings to see the full scope, then read from wherever your knowledge starts to feel uncertain. Learn more about how BloomWiki works ?

Ethnomethodology is the "Study of Common Sense"—the investigation of the "Hidden Rules" and "Everyday Methods" that people use to "Make sense" of the world and "Build" social order. While "Sociology" often looks at "Big Systems" (like Class or Religion), **Harold Garfinkel**, the founder of ethnomethodology, argued that "Society" is "Produced" every second through "Micro-Interactions." From "Breaching Experiments" (where people 'Break the rules' to see the reaction) to the "Indexicality" of conversation, this field explores the "Unwritten Scripts" of life. It is the science of "The Obvious," revealing that "Order" is not "Forced" from above, but is a "Constant Achievement" from below.

Remembering

  • Ethnomethodology — The study of the "Methods" (Ethno-methods) that "Members" of a community use to "Accomplish" their daily lives.
  • Harold Garfinkel — The father of the field, who published the "Studies in Ethnomethodology" in 1967.
  • Breaching Experiment — A research method where the scientist "Intentionally breaks a social rule" (e.g., 'Acting like a guest in your own home') to "Expose" the "Hidden expectations" of others.
  • Accounting — The way people "Explain" or "Justify" their actions to make them "Sensible" to others (e.g., 'Oh, I'm just tired').
  • Indexicality — The fact that the "Meaning" of a word or action "Depends on the context" (e.g., 'You're doing great' can be a 'Compliment' or 'Sarcasm').
  • Reflexivity — The idea that "Describing a situation" also "Creates the situation" (e.g., by 'Calling a meeting,' you 'Make the meeting happen').
  • Common Sense Knowledge — The "Stock of knowledge" we all assume "Everyone else knows" (e.g., 'How to stand in an elevator').
  • The Etcetera Principle — The "Hidden agreement" in conversation to "Ignore gaps" and "Fill in the blanks" to keep things moving.
  • Natural Attitude — The state of "Taking the world for granted" without questioning the rules.
  • Garfinkeling — A slang term for "Conducting a breaching experiment" in public.

Understanding

Ethnomethodology is understood through Breaching and Accounts.

1. The "Invisible Rule" (Breaching): How do we know "What the rules are" if they aren't written down?

  • Garfinkel told his students to "Go home and act like a polite boarder" (ask for permission to use the bathroom, pay for food).
  • Their parents were **Furious** and **Confused**.
  • This "Broke" the "Unspoken Rule" of "Intimacy."
  • By "Breaking the rule," you "Make it Visible." Ethnomethodology shows that "Social Order" is "Fragile" and requires "Constant Work" to maintain.

2. "Making Sense" (Accounting): Life is "Chaotic," but we "Describe it" as "Orderly."

  • If a person "Starts screaming" in a library, everyone looks for an **Account**.
  • "Oh, he's a Performance Artist." "Oh, he's having a Medical Crisis."
  • Once we have an "Account," the "Chaos" becomes "Sensible" and "Order" is restored.
  • We are all "Professional Sense-Makers."

3. The "Stock of Knowledge" (The Obvious):

  • When you say "The sky is blue," you don't "Define" what 'Sky' or 'Blue' is.
  • You "Assume" the other person "Already knows."
  • If we had to "Define everything," we could never finish a sentence.
  • "Common Sense" is the "Invisible Foundation" of every "High-Level" science and philosophy.

The 'Tick-Tack-Toe' Experiment': Garfinkel played a game with students. After they made a move, he "Erased it" and "Moved their piece" to a different spot. The students were "Enraged." This showed that even a "Simple Game" relies on a "Moral Trust" that we follow the "Shared Rules." Society is a "Moral Agreement" to "Play the game" correctly.

Applying

Modeling 'The Breaching Check' (Predicting the reaction to a 'Rule Break'): <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> def predict_social_reaction(broken_rule):

   """
   Shows why 'Breaking the Obvious' is so upsetting.
   """
   if broken_rule == "Standing facing the back of the elevator":
       reaction = "Confusion / Looking at the floor / Extreme Discomfort."
   elif broken_rule == "Bargaining for the price of milk at a grocery store":
       reaction = "Anger / Annoyance / Manager called."
   elif broken_rule == "Answering 'How are you?' with a 20-minute medical history":
       reaction = "Boredom / Eye-rolling / Desire to escape."
   else:
       reaction = "Social Repair (They try to 'Fix' the situation for you)."
       
   return f"BREAK: {broken_rule} | EXPECTED REACTION: {reaction}"
  1. Case: Breaking a 'Greeting' rule

print(predict_social_reaction("Answering 'How are you?' with a 20-minute medical history")) </syntaxhighlight>

Ethno Landmarks
Conversation Analysis (CA) → A sub-field that "Micro-analyzes" tapes of people talking to see the "Rules of Turn-Taking" (e.g., 'How do we know when it's our turn to speak?').
Institutional Ethnography → Watching how "Nurses" or "Judges" "Do their jobs" by using "Common Sense" to "Interpret" complex laws and rules.
User Experience (UX) Design → Modern ethnomethodology: observing how people "Actually use" a button or a menu to see what "Hidden rules" they follow, rather than "Asking" them.
The 'Waitress' Study → Observing how waitresses "Manage a crowd" by using "Micro-cues" (Eye contact, nodding) to "Keep the order" without saying a word.

Analyzing

Functional Sociology vs. Ethnomethodology
Feature Structural Sociology (Parsons/Durkheim) Ethnomethodology (Garfinkel)
Focus "Big Structures" (Systems) "Small Methods" (Interactions)
View of Order "Forced" by Norms and Laws "Created" by people in the moment
Research Method Surveys / Statistics Observation / Breaching Experiments
Goal Finding "Laws of Society" Finding "Rules of Sense-Making"
Analogy Society is a 'Machine' Society is a 'Dance' happening NOW

The Concept of "Natural Language": Analyzing "The Indexical." In ethnomethodology, a word doesn't "Mean" anything alone. "I'll be there" means something different if you are "Going to a wedding" vs. "Going to a fight." We use the "Social World" to "Fill in the meaning" of our "Incomplete words."

Evaluating

Evaluating ethnomethodology:

  1. The "So What?" Problem: Critics say: "Why study the obvious? We know how to stand in an elevator." (Garfinkel's reply: 'The obvious is the hardest thing to explain').
  2. Ethics: Is it "Right" to "Harass" or "Confuse" innocent people in "Breaching Experiments"?
  3. Power: Does this field "Ignore" "Big Power" (like Racism or Capitalism) by focusing only on "Micro-conversations"?
  4. AI: Can an AI "Understand" the "Etcetera Principle"? (Can a 'Machine' learn the 'Unwritten Rules' of 'Common Sense'?).

Creating

Future Frontiers:

  1. Common-Sense AI: Using ethnomethodology to "Teach" AIs the "Unwritten rules" of human life, so they don't do "Creepy" or "Wrong" things in social settings.
  2. Social 'Bug-Hunting' : Using "Breaching Experiments" to find "Bad Designs" in "Schools or Hospitals" that cause "Stress" for people.
  3. Conflict Resolution 2.0: Helping "Rival Groups" understand their different "Sense-Making Methods," showing them that they "Aren't Evil," they just have "Different Unwritten Rules."
  4. The 'Garfinkel' App: A "Social Awareness" app that "Gives you a daily mission" to "Break a tiny rule" (e.g. 'Compliment a stranger's shoes') to "Expand your comfort zone" and "See the world."