Abstract
Dorothy Emmet, in two books, one of which was based on extensive
personal contact with Robert Merton and Columbia sociology, provides the
closest thing we have to an authorized philosophical defense of Merton.
It features a deflationary account of functionalism which dispenses with
the idea of general teleological ends. What it replaces it with is an account
of “structures” that have various consequences and that are maintained
because, on Emmet’s account, of the mutual reinforcement of motives
produced by the structure.