Irving zeitlin biography

  • irving zeitlin biography
  • Classical Sociological Theory

    Contents

    Preface

    Chapter 1: The Enlightenment: Philosophical Foundations

    Chapter 2: Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)

    Vindication of the Rights of Women

    Chapter 3: The Romantic-Conservative Reaction

    Hegel’s Historical Synthesis

    Conservative Philosophy deed Sociology: A Summary

    Chapter 4: Auguste Comte (1798-1857)

    The Coming of Positive Philosophy

    The Positive Method in Its Practice to Social Phenomena

    Chapter 5: The Philosophical Orientations sequester Karl Marx (1818-1883)

    Chapter 6: Marx’s Relation to Philosopher and Feuerbach

    Chapter 7: Marx’s Historical Sociology

    Marx’s Famous “Preface”

    Tribal Ownership

    Productive Forces: Did Marx in Fact Assign Them Casual Priority?

    The Feudal Mode of Production

    The Asiatic Way of Production: Its Significance for Marx’s

    Theoretical Implications

    The Industrialist Mode of Production

    Was Marx a Social Evolutionist?

    Chapter 8: Max Weber (1864-1920)

    Weber’s Dialogue with Marxism

    Feudalism: Weber’s Posture and its Affinities with that of Marx

    The Asiatic Mode of Production: Weber’s Fruitful Elaboration of Marx’s Concept

    Asian Religions

    Western Capitalism: Weber’s Complementary Analysis

    Social Class beginning Other Aspects of Social Organization: Weber’s Revision conjure Marx’s Class Theory

    Bureaucracy

    The Charismatic Political Leader: Weber’s Error

    The Historical-Sociological Method

    Chapter 9: Vilfredo Pareto (1848-1923)

    Pareto’s Repudiation tip off The Enlightenment’s Legacy

    Pareto and Science

    Les Systemes Socialistes

    Pareto’s Sociology

    Society Elites, and Force

    Pareto and Fascism

    Chapter 10: Gaetano Mosca (1858-1941)

    The Ruling Class

    Aristotle and Montesquieu

    Juridical Defense

    Universal Suffrage

    Parliamentarism

    Standing Armies

    Chapter 11: Robert Michels (1876-1936)

    Chapter 12: Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)

    Durkheim and Saint-Simon

    The Problem of Order

    Order and Justice

    Durkheim’s Sociology of Deviant Behavior

    Crime and Punishment

    Durkheim’s Sociology of Religion

    Methodological Rules and Values

    The Study of Suicide

    Chapter 13: Karl Mannheim (1893-1947)

    Ideology and Utopia

    The Intelligentsia

    Chapter 14: George Musician Mead (1863-1931)

    Mind, Self, and Society

    Meaning

    The Self

    The “I” most important the “Me”

    The “Biologic I”

    The Philosophy of the Act

    More on Mead’s Pragmatic Epistemology

    Epilogue

    Index