Enlightenment and Despair: A History of Social TheoryCambridge University Press, 12.3.1987 - 312 sivua Geoffrey Hawthorn has written a substantial conclusion for the second edition of his widely acclaimed critical history of social theory in England, France, Germany and the USA from the eighteenth century onwards. Hawthorn begins with the 'prehistory' of the subject and traces, particularly in the thought of Rousseau, Kant and Hegel, the emergence of certain fundamental distinctions and assumptions whose existence is often overlooked in studies of the traditional 'founding-fathers' of sociology like Marx, Durkheim and Weber. |
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Enlightenment and Despair: A History of Social Theory Geoffrey Hawthorn Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 1987 |
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American Année Sociologique argued argument assumptions believed bourgeois bourgeoisie called Cambridge capitalism capitalist civil society clear Communist Comte Comte's concede conception conscience collective contemporary conviction course critical culture Democratic distinction division of labour Durkheim economic eighteenth century empirical England English essay established ethics Europe European evolution explained fact France freedom French German Habermas Hegel Hegelian Hobhouse human ideal ideas ideology individual industrial insisted intellectual interest J. S. Mill Kant Kant's Karl later liberal liberty London Marx Marx's Marxists Max Weber merely Mill Montesquieu moral nature Nevertheless organisation Paris particular Party Phenomenology philosophy philosophy of history positivism possible practical principle progress Protestantism question radical rational realised reason reform religion Republic Rousseau Saint-Simon Sartre secure seemed sense simply social theory socialist sociologists sociology Spencer spirit structure theoretical theorists thinking thought tion tradition universal virtue Weber wrote Zweckrationalität