Revival: A Philosophy of Social Progress (1920)

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A01=Edward Johns Urwick
Author_Edward Johns Urwick
Bare Sea Coast
Biological Sociologist
Casual Dock Labourers
Category=QD
Citizen Duties
citizenship rights duties
collective consciousness
Common Social Good
Cosmic Evolution
E. J. Urwick
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
ethical frameworks society
Ethical Stage
Friend To Friend
General Social Aim
Good Life
Impatient Reformer
John Smiths
Le Play School
Mental Heredity
Ordinary Social Activities
Phagocyte Cells
philosophical foundations of social progress
Plato's Ideal Republic
Plato’s Ideal Republic
Primitive Tribal Group
Reflective Human Consciousness
reform methodology
Research Defence Society
Separate Social Sciences
social change mechanisms
Social Units Human Beings
sociological theory
Traditional British Public School
True Individual
Working Class Adult Education

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138557437
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book was originally written with a double purpose; The first reason was to introduce students to a conception of a social philosophy which should be definitely linked to modern sociology, and not to be treated as a mere outgrowthof the older physical philosophy. The second reason, was to establish a new position in regard to the philosophical conception of social change – a position in opposition to that usually assumed both by the sociologist and by the philosopher.

Edward Johns URWICK (1867–1945) was a student of the liberal theorist T. H. Green, along with Bernard and Helen Bosanquet, he worked for the Charity Organisation Society at Toynbee Hall in the East End of London. In 1897 the Society reformed itself as a training body for social workers and took the name ‘School of Ethics and Social Philosophy’, later ‘School of Sociology’. Urwick was appointed as its first director. Financial difficulties led the School to merge with the London School of Economics in 1912, becoming its Department of Social Science and Administration. Urwick was joint Head of Department, along with Hobhouse. Urwick left the LSE in 1924, having been invited by Robert MacIver to join him at Toronto to teach social policy in the Department of Political Science. He set up the Department of Social Service in 1928 and headed this until his retirement in 1937. Early works on youth, delinquency, and wealth were followed by his principal book The Social Good (1927) which was published shortly after he left Britain and set out an evolutionary theory of moral progress and citizenship. He developed an idealist view of society as a system of moral representations.

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