Tenenberg, Josh2025-07-012025-07-012025-06-20https://hdl.handle.net/1773/53081In this document, I carry out what Livingston (2008) calls an ethnography of reason as a way to make audible and visible the actions that I take in carrying out a simple task, that of cooking when following a written recipe. The ethnography of reason is a form of empirical description adapted from Livingston’s studies using ethnomethodological methods of inquiry. The ethnography of reason involves a first-person account of an individual carrying out a task within an environing context. The account produced makes explicit what the skilled actor does, often without conscious thought, while they are busy within the midst of the activity itself.An ethnography of reason: following a recipeArticle