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24 reviews(Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition by Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley - Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9781452206233 ,1452206236
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ISBN 10: 1452206236
ISBN 13: 9781452206233
Author: Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley
(Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition Table of contents:
1. The Rise of Theoretical Sociology
The Enlightenment and New Ways of Thinking
The Intellectual Revolution
The Political and Economic Revolutions
Early Sociological Theory, 1830–1930
The First Masters
Conclusion
2. The Origin and Context of Auguste Comte’s Sociology
The Strange Biography of Auguste Comte
The Intellectual Origins of Comte’s Thought
Montesquieu and Comte
Turgot and Comte
Condorcet and Comte
Saint-Simon and Comte
Conclusion
Liberal Elements in Comte’s Thought
Traditional Elements in Comte’s Thought
3. The Sociology of Auguste Comte
Comte’s Early Essays
Comte’s Course of Positive Philosophy
Comte’s View of Sociological Theory
Comte’s Formulation of Sociological Methods
Comte’s Organization of Sociology
Comte’s Advocacy of Sociology
Critical Conclusions
4. The Origin and Context of Herbert Spencer’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Spencerian Sociology
The Political Economy of Nineteenth-Century England
The Scientific Milieu of Spencer’s England
Influences From Biology
Influences From the Physical Sciences
Spencer’s Synthetic Philosophy and the Sociology of Comte
Why Read Spencer?
5. The Sociology of Herbert Spencer
Spencer’s Moral Philosophy: Social Statics and Principles of Ethics
Spencer’s First Principles
Spencer’s The Study of Sociology
The Methodological Problems Confronting Sociology
The Theoretical Argument
A Note on Spencer’s Descriptive Sociology
Spencer’s Principles of Sociology
The Superorganic and the Organismic Analogy
The Analysis of Superorganic Dynamics
The Analysis of Societal Institutions
Domestic Institutions and Kinship
Ceremonial Institutions
Political Institutions
Religious Institutions
Economic Institutions
Critical Conclusions
6. The Origin and Context of Karl Marx’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Marx’s Thought
Hegel and the Young Hegelians
Paris and Brussels
The London Years
G. W. F. Hegel and Karl Marx
Hegel’s Idealism
Marx’s Rejection of Hegel’s Idealism
Marx’s Acceptance of Hegel’s Dialectical Method
Ludwig Feuerbach and Karl Marx
The Young Hegelians and Marx’s Thought
Feuerbach and Marx’s Thought
Adam Smith and Karl Marx
Political Economy and Marx’s Thought
Adam Smith’s Influence
Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx
Engels’s Critique of Political Economy
Engels’s Analysis of the Working Class
7. The Sociology of Karl Marx
The German Ideology
The Nature of Social Theory
The Characteristics of All Societies
Marx’s Theoretical Methodology
The Communist Manifesto
Bourgeoisie and Proletarians
Proletarians and Communists
Socialist and Communist Literature
Communist and Other Opposition Parties
Marx’s View of Capitalism in Historical Context
Marx’s Model of Stratification and Class Conflict
Capital
The Labor Theory of Value
Surplus Value
The Demise of Capitalism
Capitalism in Historical Context
Critical Conclusions
Substantive Contradictions
Where Prophecy Fails
Is Marx Still Relevant?
8. The Origin and Context of Max Weber’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Weber’s Thought
The Early Years
Before the Breakdown
The Transition to Sociology
Karl Marx and Max Weber
The Nature of Science
The Inevitability of History
Economic Determinism
The Methodenstreit and Max Weber
Issues Dividing the Historical and Theoretical Schools
Weber’s Response to the Methodenstreit
Wilhelm Dilthey and Max Weber
Dilthey’s Methodology of the Social Sciences
Weber’s Response to Dilthey’s Work
Heinrich Rickert and Max Weber
Weber’s Response to Rickert
Weber’s Theoretical Synthesis
9. The Sociology of Max Weber
Weber’s Methodology of the Social Sciences
The Problem of Values
Ideal Types
Weber’s Image of Social Organization
Weber’s Analysis of Domination
Types of Domination
Social Stratification: Class, Status Group, and Party
Weber’s Model of Social Change
Weber’s Model of Stratification and Geopolitics
Weber on Capitalism and Rationalization
Weber’s Study of Religion
The Quasi-Experimental Design
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
Weber’s Comparative Studies of Religion and Capitalism
Weber’s Outline of the Social System
Critical Conclusions
10. The Origin and Context of Georg Simmel’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Simmel’s Thought
Simmel’s Marginality
Simmel’s Intellectual Career
Intellectual Influences on Simmel’s Thought
A Note on Simmel and Weber
Herbert Spencer, Social Darwinism, and Simmel’s Thought
Immanuel Kant and Simmel’s Thought
Karl Marx and Simmel’s Thought
The Enigmatic Simmel
11. The Sociology of Georg Simmel
Simmel’s Methodological Approach to the Study of Society
What Is Society?
How Should Sociology Study Society?
What Are the Problem Areas of Sociology?
The Web of Group Affiliations
The Web of Group Affiliations as a Social Form
Structural Changes Accompanying Social Differentiation
The Consequences of Differentiation
Conflict
Conflict as a Social Form
Conflict Within Groups
Conflict Between Groups
The Philosophy of Money
Exchange as a Social Form
Simmel’s Assumptions About Human Nature
Money in Social Exchange
Money and Its Consequences for Social Relations
Critical Conclusions
12. The Origin and Context of Émile Durkheim’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Durkheim’s Thought
Charles Montesquieu and Durkheim
Montesquieu as the First Social Scientist
Montesquieu’s View of “Laws”
Montesquieu’s Typology of Governments
The Causes and Functions of Governments
Jean Jacques Rousseau and Durkheim
Rousseau’s Doctrine
Specific Influences on Durkheim
Auguste Comte and Durkheim
The Science of Positivism
The Methodological Tenets of Positivism
Social Statics and Dynamics
Science and Social Progress
Alexis de Tocqueville and Durkheim
Tocqueville’s Democracy in America
Specific Influences on Durkheim
Herbert Spencer and Durkheim
Durkheim and Spencerian Utilitarianism
Durkheim and Spencerian Organicism
Durkheim and Spencerian Evolutionism
Karl Marx and Durkheim
Anticipating Durkheimian Sociology
Methodological Tenets
Theoretical Strategy
Substantive Interests
Practical Concerns
13. The Sociology of Émile Durkheim
The Division of Labor in Society
Social Solidarity
The Collective Conscience
Social Morphology
Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
Social Change
Social Functions
Pathology and Abnormal Forms
The Rules of the Sociological Method
What Is a Social Fact?
Rules for the Observation of Social Facts
Rules for Distinguishing Between the Normal and the Pathological
Rules for the Classification of Social Types
Rules for the Explanation of Social Facts
Rules for Establishing Sociological Proofs
Suicide
Types of Suicide
Suicide and Social Integration
Suicide and Deviance
Suicide and the Social Organization of Organic Societies
The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life
An Overview of Durkheim’s Argument
Some Further Implications of Elementary Forms
A Science of “Morality”
What Is Morality?
Critical Conclusions
14. The Origin and Context of George Herbert Mead’s Thought
Biographical Influences on Mead’s Thought
Mead’s Synthesis of Schools of Thought
Utilitarianism
Darwinism
Pragmatism
Behaviorism
Wilhelm Wundt and Mead
Wundt’s View of Gestures
Wundt’s View of “Mental Communities”
William James and Mead
James’s Pragmatism
James’s View of Consciousness
James’s View of Self-Consciousness
Charles Horton Cooley and Mead
Cooley’s View of Social Organization
Cooley’s View of Interaction
Cooley’s View of Self
Cooley’s View of Primary Groups
John Dewey and Mead
Dewey’s Pragmatism
Dewey’s View of Thinking
Mead’s Synthesis
15. The Sociology of George Herbert Mead
Mead’s Broader Philosophy
Mind, Self, and Society
Mead’s View of the “Life Process”
Mead’s Social Behaviorism
Mead’s Behavioristic View of Mind
Mead’s Behavioristic View of Self
Mead’s Conception of Society
The Philosophy of the Act
Impulse
Perception
Manipulation
Consummation
Critical Conclusions
16. The Emergence of Contemporary Theoretical Perspectives
Nine Theoretical Traditions and Perspectives
Functional Theorizing
Evolutionary Theorizing
Ecological Theorizing
Conflict Theorizing
Interactionist Theorizing
Exchange Theorizing
Structuralist Theorizing
Cultural Theorizing
Critical Theorizing
Conclusion
Author Index
Subject Index
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Tags: Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley, Emergence, Sociological Theory