logo
Product categories

EbookNice.com

Most ebook files are in PDF format, so you can easily read them using various software such as Foxit Reader or directly on the Google Chrome browser.
Some ebook files are released by publishers in other formats such as .awz, .mobi, .epub, .fb2, etc. You may need to install specific software to read these formats on mobile/PC, such as Calibre.

Please read the tutorial at this link.  https://ebooknice.com/page/post?id=faq


We offer FREE conversion to the popular formats you request; however, this may take some time. Therefore, right after payment, please email us, and we will try to provide the service as quickly as possible.


For some exceptional file formats or broken links (if any), please refrain from opening any disputes. Instead, email us first, and we will try to assist within a maximum of 6 hours.

EbookNice Team

(Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition by Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley ISBN 9781452206233 1452206236

  • SKU: EBN-10651648
Zoomable Image
$ 32 $ 40 (-20%)

Status:

Available

4.8

24 reviews
Instant download (eBook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory after payment.
Authors:Jonathan H. Turner; Charles H. Powers; Leonard Beeghley
Pages:520 pages.
Year:2011
Editon:7th
Publisher:Sage Publications, Inc
Language:english
File Size:1.55 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9781452206233, 1452206236
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition by Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley ISBN 9781452206233 1452206236

(Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition by Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley - Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9781452206233 ,1452206236
Full download (Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition after payment


Product details:

ISBN 10: 1452206236
ISBN 13: 9781452206233
Author: Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley

This scholarly text covers the first one hundred years of sociological theorizing, from 1830 to 1930, focusing primarily on Comte, Spencer, Marx, Weber, Simmel, Durkheim, and Mead. The authors provide an in-depth examination of these early sociological theorists with biographical background, analysis of key works, major influences, and critical insights. They answer the question, "What do these ideas tell us about the basic forces that shape the social world?" Posing this question for each theorist adds a unique perspective to the text and distinguishes it from other sociological theory books. In addition, it also includes material on the enduring models and principles of the theorists′ work that continue to inform sociological theory today.
 

(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

People also search for (Ebook) The Emergence of Sociological Theory 7th Edition:

    
the emergence of everything pdf
    
emergence theory is predicted on the variance of which
    
2 sociological theories
    
3 sociological theory
    
3 theories sociology

Tags: Jonathan H Turner, Charles H Powers, Leonard Beeghley, Emergence, Sociological Theory

*Free conversion of into popular formats such as PDF, DOCX, DOC, AZW, EPUB, and MOBI after payment.

Related Products