Max Weber

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A01=Frank Parkin
A01=Regis A. Factor
A01=Stephen P. Turner
Actual Roman Practice
Author_Frank Parkin
Author_Regis A. Factor
Author_Stephen P. Turner
authority structures in society
basic
Basic Sociological Concepts
categories
Category=JHBA
comparative religion
Developmental Principles
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethical neutrality
Explanatory End Point
gesellschaft
historical explanation
Ideal Interests
Imputat Ions
Iron Fist
law
Law Journals
Lawyer's Life
legal
Legal Science
Nineteenth Century Social Theory
Objective Possibility
Ordinary Moral Agent
Part Conduct
political legitimacy
Ready Charity
roman
Roman Legal Concepts
Rudolf Von Ihering
science
social stratification
sociological theory
Special Purpose Language
und
Von Bar
Von Kries
weber's
Weber's Account
Weber's Categories
Weber's Methodological Writings
wirtschaft
Wirtschaft Und Gesellschaft
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415285292
  • Weight: 63g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Sep 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Max Weber: The Lawyer as Social thinker aims to relate the categories of Weber's social thinking to the intellectual context of legal thinking and theory in which he was educated. Its interpretive aim is to show how knowledge of these relations illuminates our understanding of Weber's own intentions. By comparing Weber's social theory of the teleological kind favoured by his contemporaries, which sought to identify social purposes and their effects and realization in history, but rather to radically undermine the project of teleological social theory by replacing categories of description that are amenable to or dependent upon teleological interpretations with categories that are specifically constructed to strip away teleology. The book identifies some of the key sources of Weber's thought in the legal tradition, notably the jurisprudential theorist Rudolph von Ihering, who was a classic teleological thinker, influenced by Bentham as well as by neo-Kantianism. Weber's famous definition of social action should be adequate on the level of meaning and adequate on the level cause is shown to be a variant of Ihering's purposive definition of social action. The same is done for the concept of interest, which Ihering connects to common social purposes: Weber disconnects it. The book is the only account of the sources of Weber's sociology of law. The book leads to a new interpretation of Weber. It should be of interest to scholars in social theory, jurisprudence and the history of ideas.

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