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Bøker i Routledge Library Editions: Social Theory-serien

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  • av Martin Howarth-Williams
    612 - 1 942,-

  • av Frank Hearn
    682 - 1 953,-

  • av John Carroll
    627 - 1 736,-

  • - An Introduction to Sociology
    av Stephen Frederick Cotgrove
    509 - 1 404,-

  • - A study of some points of contact. Collected essays around a central theme
    av Werner Stark
    627 - 1 953,-

  • - The application of the theory of actor-system dynamics to conflict, social power, and institutional innovation in economic life
    av Thomas Baumgartner, Tom R. Burns & Philippe DeVille
    316 - 616,-

  • - Essays in Authority and Difference
    av Philip Corrigan
    428 - 1 269,-

  • - Pretence and Possibility
    av Keith Dixon
    297 - 1 182,-

  • - The Sociology of Knowledge Dispute
     
    682,-

    Karl Mannheim¿s Ideology and Utopia has been a profoundly provocative book. The debate about politics and social knowledge that was spawned by its original publication in 1929 attracted the most promising younger scholars, some of whom shaped the thought of several generations. The book became a focus for a debate on the methodological and epistemological problems confronting German social science. More than thirty major papers were published in response to Mannheim¿s text. Writers such as Hannah Arendt, Ernst Robert Curtius, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse, Helmuth Plessner, Hans Speier and Paul Tillich were among the contributors. Their positions varied from seeing in the sociology of knowledge a sophisticated reformulation of the materialist conception of history to linking its popularity to a betrayal of Marxism. The English publication in 1936 defined formative issues for two generations of sociological self-reflection. Knowledge and Politics provides an introduction to the dispute and reproduces the leading contributions. It sheds new light on one of the greatest controversies that have marked German social science in the past hundred years.

  • av Maurice Duverger
    435 - 1 337,-

  • - Social Theory for Practice
    av Joe Bailey
    612 - 1 592,-

  • - Outline of a Positive Critique of Scientism and Sociology
    av Josef Bleicher
    653 - 1 592,-

  • - An Essay in the Application of Scientific Method to Human Problems
    av Barbara Wootton
    435 - 1 182,-

  • av Stephen Hill, Nicholas Abercrombie & Professor Bryan S. Turner
    653 - 2 095,-

  • av Stephen Hill, Nicholas Abercrombie & Professor Bryan S. Turner
    682 - 1 953,-

  • av Colin Fletcher
    298 - 668,-

  • - Social Work and Political Action
    av Paul Halmos
    682 - 1 736,-

  • - Explaining Social Life
    av Peter Halfpenny
    682 - 1 592,-

  • av Noel Timms
    653 - 1 707,-

  • av Stephen Hill, Nicholas Abercrombie & Professor Bryan S. Turner
    640 - 1 952,-

  • av James B. Wilbur
    627 - 1 592,-

  • av Barry Barnes
    653 - 1 707,-

  • av Robert J. Holton & Professor Bryan S. Turner
    682 - 2 095,-

  • - The Debate over Reformism
    av Professor Bryan S. Turner
    609 - 1 862,-

  • - A Marxist Perspective
    av Phil Slater
    627 - 1 592,-

  • - Wilhelm Dilthey's Thoughts on History and Society
    av Wilhelm Dilthey
    1 589,-

    'One may state Dilthey's significance in most general fashion by characterizing his work as the first thorough-going and sophisticated confrontation of history with positivism and natural science. Dilthey's sweep was universal: he strove to reduce to order the multifarious realms of knowledge, the conflicting traditions of cultural study, that he had embraced. Thus Dilthey laid out a program that no mortal ¿ and certainly no one whose mind had been formed in the third quarter of the nineteenth century ¿ could hope to bring to completion. Yet despite its inconclusiveness, Dilthey's work exerted enormous influence. The distinction he had drawn between natural and cultural science became standard for historians and, to a lesser extent, for social scientists also. After Dilthey historians no longer needed to apologize for the "unscientific" character of their discipline: they understood why its methods could never be quite the same as those of natural science. And the contemporary tradition of intellectual history grew naturally out of Dilthey's teaching.' ¿ H. Stuart Hughes

  • av Arthur Brittan
    453 - 1 240,-

  •  
    2 095,-

    Max Weber¿s lecture `Science as a Vocation¿ is a classic of social thought, in which central questions are posed about the nature of social and political thought and action. The lecture has often taken to be a summation of Weber¿s thought. It can also be argued that, together with the responses of its admirers and critics, it provides a focus for discussion of the nature of modernity and its political consequences, and of the philosophical and political implications of the social or human sciences. This volume provides a full, clear, revised translation of the lecture, together with translations from the German of key contributions to the lively debate that followed its publication. The book concludes with a substantial essay on the current significance of the lecture, which discusses its relevance to the debates about the nature of science as a cultural phenomenon; the disjunction between science and nature; Weber¿s conception of the disenchantment of the world; the division of scientific labour; and the fundamental nature and place of sociology.

  • - A Sociological Inquiry
    av Stanley Raffel
    640 - 1 592,-

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