- Oct 2024
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doc-0c-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com doc-0c-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com
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Both parents descended from a line ofProtestants, who had been refugees from Catholic persecution in the past buthad later become successful entrepreneurs.
religious background who low key go insane.
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Max Weber-'' was continually beset by psychic torment.
NAAUURRRRR
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All contemporaryor near-contemporary sociology shows the impact of his genius
he's HIM
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He argued that society must be considered as adelicate balance of multiple opposing forces, so that a war, a revolution, oreven an heroic leader might succeed in throwing the total balance in favor ofa particular outcome.
"It's complicated"
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In his writings on the sociologyof music Weber contrasted the concise notations and the well-tempered scaleof modern music—the rigorous standardization and coordination that governsa modern symphony orchestra—with the spontaneity and inventiveness of themusical systems of Asia or of nonliterate tribes
i enjoy his appreciate for things outside the modern paradigm of "knowledge"
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He attempted to show howprophets with their charismatic appeals had undermined priestly powersbased on tradition; how with the emergence of "book religion" the final sys-tematization and rationalization of the religious sphere had set in, which foundits culmination in the Protestant Ethic
Rationalization of Protestant Ethic crushed charismatic appeal of previous prophets
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rather than being a consequence of capitalism as such.
For Weber, alienation from means of production was consequence of rationalization more than capitalism as it stands on its own.
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Eden
Marx and Weber agreed on modern society being alienated from a sort of protection of humanity or freedom despite the modern world being efficient. However, MArx had a vision for future and Weber didn't
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Thus modern rationalized and bureaucratized sys-tems of law have become incapable of dealing with individual particularities,to which earlier types of justice were well suited.
Bureaucracy , power and systems based on rational action, gave humans ability to do a lot but also made it hard to handle individual cases.
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Weberagreed that quite often, especially in the modern capitalist world, economicpower is the predominant form. But he objects that "the emergence of eco-nomic power may be the consequence of power existing on other grounds.
Marx and Weber on the same page about class dynamic aligning with vast power inequalities, but Weber things the power could have derived from other things.
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which are held together by notions of proper life-styles and by thesocial esteem and honor accorded to them by others.
life-styles bring people together
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Classification of men into such groups is based on their consumption pat-terns rather than on their place in the market or in the process of production.
Class distinguished by actions within market not place in production like Marx
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and a positive ethical sanction is provided for acquisitive activities aimed atmaximizing the self-interests of the actor.
capitalist system founded on rational action in a rational system. Rationalization of economic system realized when everyone believes it moral to act in their own self-interest. An idea posed by Protestant Ethic.
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authority
believed that types could mix
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religious
3 types of authority - rational-legal - traditional - charismatic
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In all these instances, Weber also provides illustra-tions pointing to changing motivations of historical actors, yet on balance,structure seems more important than motivation.
not always abiding by his own doctrine- used structure a lot as a unit of analysis.
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framework
in analyzing both historical and social causes requires sort of mental experiments asking of something would occur without a certain action or event- trying to isolate causes.
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B
Historical causality- this unique circumstance rose from __ Social causality- A may lead to B or increases the chances of B
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probability
in certain contexts we can expect behavior but can never count on it in all instances
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a variety of causal chains
follow many different "causal chains" to reach conclusions as opposed to one single cause and affect
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his recognition of the extreme difficulties in making entirely ex-haustive causal imputations.
probability of human behavior doesn't come from notions of free will as much as it comes from the variety of situations and possibilities that can't always be accounted for in strict categories
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Weber argued, for example, that human action was truly unpredict-able only in the case of the insane,
maybe Durkheim would differ
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We shall then be in a position to determine empiricallywhether the concrete conduct of Protestants in, say, seventeenth-century Eng-land did in fact approximate the type and in what specific aspects it failedto do so
Did the actions of Protestants via 17th-England correlate with the ideal type of Protestant?
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An ideal type never corresponds to concretereality but always moves at least one step away from it. It is constructed outof certain elements of reality and forms a logically
ideal type- the social construction of what something should be??
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Thenotion of the ideal type was meant to provide escape from this dilemma
believes in necessity of generalizations and concepts but wary of over encompassing categories that try to explain literally everything. Additionally, wary of too narrow a focus of a case or a situation.
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or does it partake of the contempla-tion of sages and philosophers about the meaning of the universe.
science is an occupation or method, cannot interpret meaning of the universe
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Weber was fundamentally at odds with those who argued for a moralitybased on science.
Weber didn't believe morality should be based on science as that was not the nature of science
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Hence, the relativity ofvalue orientations leading to different cognitive choices has nothing to do withquestions of scientific validity
subjectivity of choices researcher makes does not take away from scientific validity.
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A sociology of humangroups has the inestimable advantage of having access to the subjective aspectsof action, to the realm of meaning and motivation.
Social scientists have access to a layer of motivations for human behavior that we can't get in natural science. We can ask people why they do things. Therefore, sociology is an interpretative understanding of social behavior
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Hence there is no in-surmountable chasm between the procedures of the natural and the socialscientist, but they differ in their cognitive intentions and explanatory projects
lack of objectivity means natural science isn't some "objective" science while social science is subjective
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"There is no absolutely'objective' scientific analysis of culture or ... of 'social phenomena' inde-pendent of special and 'one-sided' viewpoints according to which—expresslyor tacitly, consciously or unconsciously—they are selected, analyzed and organ-ized for expository purposes."
YUUUUPPP
no "objective" as the scientists chose what to observe
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Both the natural and the social sciences mustabstract from the manifold aspects of reality; they always involve selection.
whole pg- natural science differs from social science becaus the aims are different. Both require systems of conceptualization.
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And against both theseapproaches Weber emphasized the value-bound problem choices of the in-vestigator and the value-neutral methods of social research
bars?!
researchers are problem-bound (abstract and distinctly human) but methods can remain systematic.
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Against the historicists Weber argued that the method of science,whether its subject matter be things or men, always proceeds by abstractionand generalization. Against the positivists, he took the stand that man, in con-trast to things, could be understood not only in external manifestations, that is,in behavior, but also in the underlying motivations.
Weber stood by idea of underlying motivations (people are not just acted or influenced upon?) but also though of science and social science similar in they start with abstractions then move to the emprical.
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Hence it is the task of sociology to reduce these concepts to "under-standable" action, that is without exception, to the actions of participatingindividual men.
systems and state understood as extensions of human action
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nature
didnt subscribe to idea that natural and social sciences parallel nor idea that human action has no similar patterns to natural world
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'Which social factors havebrought about the rationahzation of Western civilization?
Why is Modern Western Civilization so driven by rationality? As opposed to tradition, affect, or value-oriented rationality.
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The paradigm of a sociology which is both historical and systematic.
Weber combined systematic observations with historical context?
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action.
4 types of action: 1. rational- rational end goal is pursued with rational means 2. Value-oriented- end goal not perfectly rational but pursued through rational means 3. Affective- emotional motives, not rational 4. Traditional action- habitual
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Weber argued, falls outside the purviewof sociology
Weber obsessed with social actors and human behavior as basis for sociology- differs from Durkheim's "social conscience" and Marx's class tension.
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e in a great while a textbook comes a
hellloooooo????
Annotators
URL
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www.dropbox.com www.dropbox.com
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atcontemptuousgesture,hesummeduphisfeelingsaboutthemanandtheissue:"Well,afterall,hewasjustl
trial x 2?
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IntroductionSomeyears
triallllll
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Such an aim draws him beyond himself; impersonaland disinterested, it is above all individual personalities; like everyideal, it can be conceived of only as superior to and dominatingreality.
by committing to individual- we are morally obligated to a higher ideal
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something
from Marti- individuality derived from society but does not divide us
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Since human personality is the only thing that appeals unanimouslyto all hearts, since its enhancement is the only aim that can becollectively pursued, it inevitably acquires exceptional value in theeyes of all. It thus rises far above all human aims, assuming areligious nature
Value people because they are people- is singular uniting factor as people differ
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individual differences multiply
in these circumstances, where people are supposed to be diffferent people, why buy into a collective
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In the first, the indi-vidual is forbidden to destroy himself on his own authority; but theState may permit him to do so. The act is immoral only when it iswholly private and without collaboration through the organs of collect-ive life. Under specific circumstances, society yields slightly andabsolves what it condemns on principle. In the second period, con-demnation is absolute and universal. The power to dispose of a humanlife, except when death is the punishment for a crime, 28 is withheld notmerely from the person concerned but from society itself. It is hence-forth a right denied to collective as well as to private disposition.
historically, less and less has societal systems been or anybody at all been given away the right to take away human life
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This is an error. Society is injuredbecause the sentiment is offended on which its most respected moralmaxims today rest, a sentiment almost the only bond between itsmembers, and which would be weakened if this offense could becommitted with impunity
suicide does not just harm oneself, it harms the strongest sentiment that binds people together
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How couldwe have such a right if society, the existence greater than ourselves,does not have it?
Cult of humanity- overarching obligation to buy into a society and what makes suicide immoral, not just illegal or an offense of the state.
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Because we have animmortal soul in us, a spark of divinity, we must now be sacred toourselves. We belong completely to no temporal being because we arekin to God
we belong to a being beyond ourselves- what makes a suicide so scandalizing
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The publicconscience, while reproving it as a general rule, reserved the right toauthorize it in certain cases
public conscience allowed suicide in certain cases
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cult of humanpersonality
DING DING DING
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This is not true of suicide, which,beyond 10 or 15 years, is common to all ages
if hereditary why does it have an equal chance of appearing at all ages beyond 10-15
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, buta general, vague aptitude
race and hereditary creates a vague aptitude at best, better defined by broader circumstances.
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psychologists
well dang
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health
suicide prevented by realizing person she thought was her father who committed suicide wasn't her father-
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fate
suicide seems fated in families, motivating them to suicide
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way
"inherited" suicide happens the same way for each person. They die the same way and at the same age.
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inclination
key thing is contagiousness of suicide- the tendency to imitate an accessible suggestion. Especially if they already had some inclination.
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result
Still, there are insane families without epidemics of suicide and suicide ridden families who aren't insane
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were insane.
someon doesn't kill themselves because they're parents killed themselves, it was because they were insane because their parents were insane.
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apprehended
mental affliction is always transmitted in instances of hereditary suicide
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effect
even in the few amount of instances in which suicide was relatively hereditary, other causes present.
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Thus it would depend essentially on individual causes
but, does hereditary disposition play an influence??
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ccordingly, the difference observed betweenthem under other circumstances is not one of race
race does not play an influence
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Austria
austria can answer this bc its just germans not in germany
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Let us see whether the German retains thissad primacy outside Germany, in the midst of the life of other peoplesand acclimatized to different civilizations
high suicide rate in germans but need to look at non-germans of same "race" to identify if it's a race thing or a civilization thing.
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suicide
under commonly accepted ideas of races within Europe, which he doesn't accept, no clear correlation between race and suicide.
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nationality
race to him is nationality because there's no better way to distinguish it.
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“race” no longer corresponds to anything def-inite.
bro how was he so ahead
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social phenomena
Exactly - race as a social phenomena
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ving factors of historical developmen
Race is a matter of social development as supposed to inherited traits
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A society does not depend for its number of suicides onhaving more or fewer neuropaths or alcoholics
Alcholism nor neuropathism correlate with suicide.
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alcoholism
does alcoholism lead to suicide?
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suicide-rate
can't correlate neurasthenians with suicide because too varied in experiences.
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Such an ambiguous power 30 could not therefore accountfor so definite a social fact as the suicide-rate
Neurasthenians often successful or innovators-
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Disgust with life andinert melancholy will readily germinate amongst an ancient and dis-oriented society, with all the fatal consequences which they imply;contrariwise, in a youthful society an ardent idealism, a generous pros-elytism and active devotion are more likely to develop
Neurathenians will be melancholy and disgusted with life in a dis-oriented society but overly charismatic in an youthful and ideologically oriented one.
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insanity
no questioning of diagnosis of insanity?
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But even by combining them no regular parallel-ism is found between the extent of mental alienation and that of sui-cide.
THIS
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; for idiots are much more numerous in thecountry than in the city, while suicides are much rarer in the country
well damn- but i get the gist- less educated doesn't correlate with suicide and Morselli considered the dumb ones insane
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But thisis because, first, he has combined the insane proper and idiots underthe common name of alienated
im dead
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religion
Jewish people "more insane" but also less likely to commit suicide.
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moment
THIS ONE- *If mental alienation is the extreme on the spectrum of neurasthenia, then neurasthenia should correlate somewhat with suicide. However, while there are more women in asylums then men, men commit suicide more frequently then women. This denounces the presence of a correlation.
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centers
social causes of suicide greater in urban civilization
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proportion
not all nervous degenerates are insane
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person
the issue of the neuropath- between insane and normal??- is in their sensitivity they are forced to create their own systems or improvise, making it difficult to adapt to fixed social systems
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generality
mentally alienated people can't be taken into account to reach a general conclusion about suicide, but people not in an equilibrium of intelligence but not totally alienated can be considered.
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freely
Need to reconsider suicide as an individual path or thought process developed and motivated by the single person.
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purpose
believes causes are broader than an individual's purpose= look beyond individual factors
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average
not all suicides from insane people- even if they think slightly different than other people.
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immediately
Cause 4 impulsive thought acted upon immediately- no particular other attachments or patterns as in mania
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impulse
Cause 3- intrusive thought of suicide that can't be ignored, seems independent of other causes.
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character
Cause 2- depression characterized by depressive thoughts, detachment and calm planning of suicide
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destruction
Cause 1- manic episodes cause suicide
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groups
boil suicide down do characteristics and sort characteristics into certain groups, which, in total, should include all cases
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insanity
therefore, suicide is not a distinct or unique form of insanity in which suicide is only a result of a suicidal insanity
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task
parts of the brain less clearly defined, many parts for one function
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but as interdependent functions;thus one cannot suffer lesion without the others being affected
Now, mental forces not regarded as separate.
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- Sep 2024
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Local file Local file
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invades
insanity is total
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Clinical experience has never been able to observe adiseased mental impulse in a state of pure isolation;
from clinical experience, few examples of isolated mental diseases- how distinct is psychology now?
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Thus, ambition, from beingnormal, becomes morbid and a monomania of grandeur when itassumes such proportions that all other cerebral functions seem para-lyzed by it
idea of suicide as monomanias- only one thing wrong but enough to push them over. Suicide is an isolated thought and obsession
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suicidal insanity
is there a condition of insanity that correlates with suicide, if so, what does it look like?
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persons
suicide is a special form of insanity or it is a variety of insanity- either way, there is not suicide without insanity
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environment
let's consider extra-social causes
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docdrop.org docdrop.orgUntitled82
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In this regard, both pursue the same goal; scientific thought is only a moreperfected form of religious thought. Hence it seems natural that religionshould lose ground as science becomes better at performing its task.
science often perceived as a perfected form of religion
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In short, the former gods are growing old or dying, and others have notbeen born.
need to make new Gods
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Its pity forthe downcast seems to us too platonic. We would like one that is more vig-orous but do not yet see clearly what it should be or how it might be realizedin fact.
religion is kind of dead and we need a revival of morals
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uitenaturally, the corresponding mythological personages are of the same charac-ter; their sphere of influence is not definite; they hover above the individualtribes and above the land. These are the great international gods
even among tribes are religions shared
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Except by reachingoutside himself, how could the individual add to the energies he possesses
not true religion because not beyond oneself
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have shown that precisely this is often true of ritual activityand mythological thought.
not just reflection of history and growth of knowledge?
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It rests on conditions that can be uncovered through observa-tion. It is a natural product of social life.
religion is scientific in its patterns that can be observed
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In short, upon the real world where pro-fane life is lived, he superimposes another that, in a sense, exists only in histhought, but one to which he ascribes a higher kind of dignity than he as-cribes to the real world of profane life.
sacred is just an imposed reality
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since what defines the sacred is that thesacred is added to the real.
this is a bar
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his persistent idealization is a fundamental fea-ture of religions.
religion is idealization of the world in its hyperbolic notions of goodness, justice, a vision for the future alongside evil, trickery, and bad intentions.
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n the end, the point is not to exerta kind of physical constraint upon blind and, more than that, imaginaryforces but to reach, fortify, and discipline consciousnesses.
no physical or even divine aspect of religion beyond moral fortification on a broad scale
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religion
in conversation with current(for him) ideas of everything stemming from religion- replacing religion with society
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hus it is action that dominates religious life, for the very rea-son that society is its source.
action is fuel source to religion
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have shown what moralforces it develops and how it awakens that feeling of support, safety, and pro-tective guidance which binds the man of faith to his cult.
society makes religion
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properties
distinct separation of science and religion- fundamentally different purposes
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Thecultisnotmerelyasystemof signsbywhichthefaithisoutwardlyexpressed;itisthesumtotalofmeansbywhichthat faithiscreated andrecreatedperiodically
the collective creates the greater source from which an power that is beyond oneself stems from
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he is a man who is stronger.
Knowing God isn't about gaining knowledge it's about receiving fuel or gaining resilience
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Indeed, they sense that thetrue function of religion is not to make us think, enrich our knowledge, or addrepresentations of a different sort and source to those we owe to science. Itstrue function is to make us act and to help us live.
Religion and Science have fundamentally different purposes WE LOVE TO SEE ITTTT
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hether there is room alongside scientific knowledge for another form ofthought held to be specifically religious.
basis of science and religion is not within some far off natural truth-
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single idea cannot express one reality here and a dif-ferent one there unless this duality is merely apparent.
if it wasn't true it wouldn't make itself apparent and if something contrasts there is a duality
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the truths thus obtained would be applicable to allliving things, including the most advanced, even if this case was the simplestprotoplasmic being imaginable.
a little too confident in his concept nonsense theory but ok
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But it is noless true that when a law has been proved by a single well-made experiment,this proof is universally valid.
ummmm no
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ollective consciousness is the highest form of psychic life, forit is a consciousness of consciousnesses. Being outside and above individualand local contingencies, collective consciousness sees things only in theirpermanent and fundamental aspect,* which it crystallizes in ideas that can becommunicated.
consciousness of consciousness- understand the world outside of ourselves too see something more fundamental and with stronger continuity across human experience
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single causal relation
common collective goals bring people together
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time
time is a commonly established concept
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other
need for classifications to form groups with similar needs
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Thesewould be sufficient for man as well if his movements had to satisfy individualneeds alone. In order to recognize that one thing resembles others withwhich we are already acquainted, we need not arrange them in genera andspecies.
need to understand what others need and see is why concepts were born- proof of social beings
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way
history is a collective memory based in events impact on society
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For the same reason, the rhythm of collective life governs and con-tains the various rhythms of all the elementary lives of which it is the result;consequently, the time that expresses it governs and contains all the individ-ual times. It is time as a whole.
conceptualization exists only alongside collective- does not exist in one persons mind
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The concept of totality is but the concept ofsociety in abstract form.
society is in a sense totality- all things
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Since the universe exists only insofar as it is thought of and since it isthought of in its totality only by society, it takes its place within society; itbecomes an element of society’s inner life, and thus is itself the total genusoutside which nothing exists.
universe is our concept of it- grounds in society - don't think he actually means the universe as a a physical object with limitations is only in our heads, but the only way we understand and know it is through our societal concepts, confining it to the social space. Do we know the universe outside of our collective conceptualization?
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But that state of personal expectancy can-not be assimilated to the conception of a universal order of succession thatimposes itself on all minds and all events.
understands existence and changing of world beyond himself but still sees through own experience.
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But all these relationships are personal to the indi-vidual who is involved with them, and hence the notion he can gain fromthem can in no case stretch beyond his narrow horizon.
okay so nature itself isn't social- but the concepts and laws to define it are because they were created by the collective, a bunch of individual observations and similar sensations brought together and synthesized
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e category of genus was at firstindistinct from the concept of human group; the category of time has therhythm of social life as its basis; the space society occupies provided the rawmaterial for the category of space; collective force was the prototype for theconcept of effective force, an essential element in the category of causality
every concept can be derived from the social realm as all concepts were developed socially
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definition
not just the "un-refined" who can't explain their own concepts- we(french society) can't explain a lot of concepts they all collectively believe in.
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t is also to subsume the variable under thepermanent and the individual under the social.
to conceptualize seeks continuity in individual instances and individual experience within social pattern
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But that faith is not essentially different from reli-gious faith. The value we attribute to science depends, in the last analysis,upon the idea we collectively have of its nature and role in life, which is tosay that it expresses a state of opinion.
faith in the collective opinion- translates to science and to religion
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The method I follow in the study of religiousphenomena is based on exactly this principle.
believes that theories con be proven with observation like science
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Concepts
his form of concepts is beyond distant theories of philosophers but things many people intrinsically know - social theory
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t is in the form of collective thoughtthat impersonal thought revealed itself to humanity for the first time, and bywhat other route that revelation could have come about is hard to se
only thing that distinguishes logical thought is collective experience- or consideration of collective experience as opposed to individual experience
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his is why we have somuch difficulty understanding one another, and why, indeed often, we lie toone another unintentionally. This happens because we all use the same wordswithout giving them the same meaning
confusing because we have our individual ideas of concepts that differ- different ideas of social ideas? standards?
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society
concepts are built or legitimized in a collective process
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crystallized
concept is crystallized- can't be changeable unless it needs to be fixed
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the concept must be defined by other traits.
conceptual has its own set of traits to define it- differ from the empirical traits that are precise but lack continuity over time- difference experiences yield different observations even if they are tied to the same conceptual thing.
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In this regard, our ownconcepts and those of science differ only in degree
religion and science have concepts that are also tied to the particular?
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ne can affirm nothing that science denies, deny nothing that science af-firms, and establish nothing that does not directly or indirectly rest on prin-ciples taken from science.
science occupies new authority for explaining things
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the formulas tobe pronounced and the movements to be executed would lose efficacy if theywere not exactly the same as those that had already proved successful
replicability adds validity in religious context
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role
sacrifices as invoking the religious without any spiritual being involved
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in innumerable religions.
there are rules and things in Christianity that don't seem to involve a higher being at all as much as interpersonal logistics or cultural norms
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life
Buddha brought about a doctrine- the doctrine is the key to salvation not the figure unlike in Christianity where salvation comes through Christ
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death
first buddha was likely just a really holly chill guy that not one expected to be made a God out of
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he is uninterested in whether gods exist
Buddhists dont gaf if a god exist- the ethic of their life independent- if so they are considered worldly and deter from true salvation
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through
yet, Buddhism is a religion without an a true spiritual being to explain things
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Spiritual beings” must be understood to mean con-scious subjects that have capacities superior to those of ordinary men, whichtherefore rightly includes the souls of the dead, genies, and demons as well asdeities, properly so-called.
religion = relations with supernatural beings with powers that differ from ordinary men
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lower races,
ayoo?!
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advanced
advanced meaning within a civilization deeply rooted in what we consider the natural sciences
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forth
god's often explain the regular seasons and patterns than the rare occurrences
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Religious conceptions aim above all to express andexplain not what is exceptional and abnormal but what is constant and reg-ular.
Religion doesn't explain the extraordinary but the ordinary
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To have the idea of the supernatural, then, it is notenough for us to witness unexpected events; these events must be conceivedof as impossible besides—that is, impossible to reconcile with an order thatrightly or wrongly seems to be a necessary part of the order of things. It isthe positive sciences that have gradually constructed this notion of a neces-sary order. It follows that the contrary notion cannot have predated those sci-ences
things out of order also a modern phenomena with natural science- even in nature are there anomalies, people aren't unused to them
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t is in this form, Jevons claims,that the idea of the supernatural was born at the beginning of history; and itis in this way and at this moment that religion acquired its characteristic ob-ject.
supernatural was once understood as not outside the laws of nature but outside the usual order of things and patterns
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but they were not regarded as glimpses intoa mysterious world where reason could not penetrate.
even the wildest events and miracles were not taken as mysterious as much as terrible, rare, or suprising
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o long as what is immovable and inflexible about the or-der of things was unknown, and so long as it was seen as the work ofcontingent wills, it was of course thought natural that these wills or otherscould modify the order of things arbitrarily.
much of time all of nature- what we perceive as natural and supernatural was a competition of wills
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Itpresupposes an idea that is its negation, and that is in no way primitive. To beable to call certain facts supernatural,
supernatural only a recent categorization of events, based on the idea of natural laws from which something can divert from
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he forces he brings into play by these various means do not seem tohim particularly mysterious.
religion is not perceived as any more mysterious than the natural forces of our world for the "uncivilized"
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What is certain, in any case, is that this idea appears very late in the his-tory of religions.
idea of progression of civilizations- barbaric to civil
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Faith effortlesslyreconciled itself with science and philosophy; and thinkers like Pascal, whofelt strongly that there is something profoundly obscure in things, were so lit-tle in harmony with their epochs that it was their fate to be misunderstoodby their contemporaries.
religion not always associated with what is mysterious- even in Christianity religion once associated with science and philosophy
- basis for sociological approach
- make the known unknown, use of Christianity as example
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Besides, we have seen that the preference for studying religion among themost civilized peoples is far from being the best method.”
Religion instructive- should look beyond civil peoples
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Religion can be defined onlyin terms of features that are found wherever religion is found.
Religion drawn from continuity of characteristics- not from a theological mandate
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If taking this step is to yield the results it should, we must begin by free-ing our minds of all preconceived ideas.
need to break down/rewrite what a religion is before we get into it
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I willtake advantage of all the opportunities that present themselves to capture atbirth at least some of those ideas that, while religious in origin, were boundnevertheless to remain at the basis of human mentality.
religion as reflection of a social logic
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they appear as ingenious instruments of thought, which humangroups have painstakingly forged over centuries, and in which they haveamassed the best of their intellectual capital.2
reason has tangible validity when paired with the empirical
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of time, space, genus, cause, and personality are constructedfrom social elements should not lead us to conclude that they are stripped ofall objective value. Quite the contrary, their social origin leads one indeed tosuppose that they are not without foundation in the nature of things.
conceptions of nature, time, space, genus, cause, and personality, don't need to be denied their root in the "objective." In fact, it is their existence in social realm that allows us to guess their natural origin- that's a stretch okaaayyyy. Feels like he's saying because it exists... it exists
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greatercomplexity
sure...
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ewouldthusreturntonominalismandempiricismbyanotherroute
is everything just a social agreement or pattern? Let's not get ahead of ourselves
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Outsideus,it isopinionthatjudgesus;morethanthat,becausesocietyisrepresentedinsideusaswell,itresiststheserevolutionary impulses fromwithin.Wefeelthatwe cannotabandonourselvestothem withoutourthought’s ceasingtobe trulyhuman.
diverting from larger human patterns faces external and internal resistance- outside judgement and internal lack of identity. The authority of society is internalized as natural law? Even though Durkheim doesn't think it is.
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heydoindeedexpressthemostgeneralrelationshipsthatexistbe-tweenthings;having broaderscopethanallourideas,theygovernalltheparticularsofour intellectuallife.If,ateverymoment, mendidnotagreeonthesefundamentalideas,iftheydidnothaveahomogeneousconceptionoftime, space, cause,number,andsoon.Allconsensusamongminds,andthusallcommonlife,wouldbecomeimpossible.
Necessity of categories not circular argument- are evident in occurrences and interactions when taken as a whole
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Aspartofsociety,theindividualnaturallytranscendshimself,bothwhenhethinksandwhenheacts.
reductionist to think of experience as a product of individual motive
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hat beingthecase,weunderstandhowreasonhasgainedthepowertogobeyondtherangeofempirical cognition.Itowesthispowernottosomemysteriousvirtuebutsimplytothefact that,asthewell-knownfor-mulahasit,manisdouble.Inhimaretwobeings:anindividual beingthathasitsbasisinthebodyandwhosesphereofactionisstrictlylimitedbythisfact,andasocialbeingthatrepresentswithinusthehighestrealityinthein-tellectualandmoral*realmthatisknowablethroughobservation:
Need for reason + empirical evidence and experiences reflected of two-faceted nature of human motives. One; humans have an individual conscience and a body with physical limitations. Two; a social being influenced by intellectual and moral forces beyond themselves
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Therepresentationsthatexpresssocietythereforehaveanal-togetherdifferentcontentfromthepurely individual representations,andonecanbecertaininadvancethat theformeraddsomethingtothelatter.
social patterns are a separate thing from individual experience- abides by its own logic but influences human choice
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To answer thesequestions, it has sometimes been imagined that, beyond the reason of indi-viduals, there is a superior and perfect reason from which that of individualsemanated and, by a sort of mystic participation, presumably acquired its mar-velous faculty: That superior and perfect reason is divine reason. But, at best,this hypothesis has the grave disadvantage of being shielded from all experi-mental control, so it does not meet the requirements of a scientific hypothe-sis. More than that, the categories of human thought are never fixed in adefinite form; they are ceaselessly made, unmade, and remade; they vary ac-cording to time and place.
While we cannot assume human theory as an explanation for everything- do throw everything in the hands of divine reason makes every hypothesis untestable- a complete surrender of making sense of the world around us
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erely to say it is inher-ent in the nature of human intellect is not to explain that power.
people's conceptualization of a power dynamic doesn't prove it into existence or provide an explanation for it's prescence
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Under these conditions,to reduce reason to experience is to make reason disappear—because it is toreduce the universality and necessity that characterize reason to mere appear-ances, illusions that might be practically convenient but that correspond tonothing in things. Consequently, it is to deny all objective reality to that log-ical life which the function of the categories is to regulate and organize. Clas-sical empiricism leads to irrationalism; perhaps it should be called by that name
Reason doesn't = experience. Experience always maintains a subjective lense while resason is intended to be universal. Theory vs empircal. Similarly, experience is not denied of reason as reason is intended to organize experience and is useful for that purpose
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doc-0c-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com doc-0c-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com
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Durkheim seems to have been acutely aware that his active participationin the university and in the educational affairs of the Third Republic broughtwith it the danger that his sociological work would be overshadowed by politi-cal commitments
Disengaged from political discussions to not take away from his participation in the field of education
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The Durkheimian spirit of civic morality had conquered the primaryschools, and both the Catholic Right and the Marxist Left felt threatenedsince they feared that their potential sources of recruitment might now dry up.All this helps us understand the feelings of the Catholic sociologist JeanIzoulet when he wrote:
centrist? civic morality neither religious nor rejecting of religion?
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philosopher Louis Liard, who in 1884 had become Director of HigherEducation at the Ministry of Public Education
How do all these philosophers have real jobs?
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neo-positiv-ism
importance of empirical evidence within philosophy
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But contemporaries testified that each issue of the Annee wasindeed an intellectual event for historians or social psychologists, as well as forsociologists
His publication th Annee was indeed the sh*t
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cle to "infiltrate" sociological ideas and approaches into other,older fields of scholarship
Sociology gained influence in other disciplines through Durkheim
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Suicide
thats such a modern name lols
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The first, he writes, "initiated and defendedthe claim of sociology to intellectual legitimacy." Once the claim was heard,the true founders of modern sociology "pressed [this] claim to institutionallegitimacy, by addressing themselves to those institutionalized status-judges ofthe intellect: the universities."^^ Comte and Spencer had spent much of theirenergies in convincing the public that the new science deserved a hearingamong the educated. Their successors, though still continuing this struggle,faced the additional task of giving sociology an institutionalized strongholdwithin the confines of the academy
Comte and Spencer made sociology legitimate, Durkheim, Simmel and Weber put it in the institution
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omte, Marx,and Spencer.
Mfs who matter
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to replace the religious values with which he himself had been brought up.
still felt need for a religion
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French republican and secular society be-came for him a passionate object of love, replacing his attachment to the re-ligious community of his native home.
replaced native religious community with passion for french republic and secular society
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of communal prestige if not the powers that their forebears had onceenjoyed. Through them Durkheim belonged to the elite of the community.His break with the Jewish tradition of his father consequently must have beena traumatic and decisive event in his life
break from religion had to have been serious
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hand had their own courts of law and generally attempted to regulatetheir own affairs with only minimal interference by royal authority
Ashkenazi lived separate
Annotators
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