Man in his daily life is only partially and we dare say exceptionally interested in the clarity of his knowledge, i.e., in all insight into the relations between the elements of his world and the general principles ruling those relations. He is satisfied that a well-functioning telephone service is available to him and, normally, does not ask how the apparatus functions in detail and what laws of physics make this functioning possible. He buys merchandise in the store, not knowing how it is produced, and pays with money, although he has only a vague idea what money really is. He takes it for granted that his fellowman will understand his thought if expressed in plain language and will answer accordingly, without wondering how this miraculous performance may be explained. Furthermore, he does not search for the truth and does not quest for certainty. All he wants is information on likelihood and insight into the chances or risks which the situation at hand entails for the outcome of his actions. That the subway will run tomorrow as usual is for him almost of the same order of likelihood as that the sun will rise. If by reason of a special interest he needs more explicit knowledge on a topic, a benign modern civilization holds ready for him a chain of information desks and reference libraries.
— Alfred Schutz
- Alfred Schutz Biography
Stanford University - The Viennese Connection:
Alfred Schutz and the Austrian School [PDF]
Ludwig von Mises Institute - Alfred Schutz, Phenomenology and Research Methodology for Information Behaviour Research
by T.D. Wilson
InformationR.net - Alfred Schutz Papers
Yale University - Alfred Schutz Bibliography
International Encyclopedia of Philosophy