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Matthias Gisslar's avatar

Thank you for taking your time to read my book and write about it.

For those who read this, Eric was one of the first to follow me when I appeared on Twitter in the beginning of this year. You know what they say about how people treat those from whom they have nothing to expect. Eric showed real interest in a new voice and was also one of the first to follow me on X.

I think our minds met on two questions. First, that something was off with Haidt's explanation that fragility explained cancel culture. Second, that the long march and law as culture explanations out there failed to address the demand side and the more broadly modern and western nature of the ideas that underpin identity politics.

I will be reading Taboo, but I will probably not do a normal review of this kind. What I will do is the same as in my book, that is test my own framework and the full set of extant explanations against what is new, in terms of theory and data in Eric's work. This means going both broader and more in detail.

What I have done in my book is canvassing of previous research and theoretical induction, as a first iteration towards understanding where we are and how we got there. This means taking as broad as possible an approach to explanations, before starting the process of adding more data in order to discern which explanations turn out to carry the most weight. I hope that Taboo will help catapult that process forward.

I should also mention that I am an historically oriented anthropologist, without any systematic training in the sociological tradition or literature. What anthropologists are specialised in is the concept of culture, while their command of sociological theory probably varies individually.

Since I have not really zeroed in on what the explanations are for the situation we are in, I am very far from suggesting an action plan. My plan is instead to continue with a number of topics that I identified in the book, which require more specialised literature to pursue further.

Eric seems to be involved in many places. A thought for the long run is that there should be a network of European researchers who are interested in both explaining the situation we are in and finding a solution to the crisis of the social sciences, which, in my view, has been left unresolved since the 1990s.

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