رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Visions of the sociological tradition / "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 711357
Doc. No : b533546
Main Entry : Levine, Donald N.,1931-2015
Title & Author : Visions of the sociological tradition /\ Donald N. Levine
Publication Statement : Chicago :: University of Chicago Press,, c1995
Page. NO : xiii, 365 p. :: ill. ;; 24 cm
ISBN : 0226475468 (cloth : acid-free paper)
: : 0226475476 (pbk. : acid-free paper)
: : 9780226475462 (cloth : acid-free paper)
: : 9780226475479 (pbk. : acid-free paper)
Bibliographies/Indexes : Includes bibliographical references (p. 337-353) and index
Contents : 1. Disciplines and Their Stories -- 2. Positivist and Pluralist Narratives -- 3. Synthetic Narratives -- 4. Humanist and Contextualist Narratives -- 5. The Changing Need for Narratives -- 6. The Hellenic Tradition -- 7. The British Tradition -- 8. The French Tradition -- 9. The German Tradition -- 10. The Marxian Tradition -- 11. The Italian Tradition -- 12. The American Tradition -- 13. Forming and Transforming a Discipline -- 14. Diagnoses of Our Time -- 15. On the Heritage of Sociology -- 16. In Quest of a Secular Ethic -- Epilogue: Dialogue as an Antidote to Fragmentation? -- Appendix A: Selected Dates in the History of Western Social Thought -- Appendix B: Graphic Depictions of the Six Types of Narrative -- Appendix C: Basic Postulates of the Seven Traditions
Abstract : This book is a masterful account of the social science enterprise by one of its most accomplished practitioners. Moving from the origins of systematic knowledge in ancient Greece to the present day, Donald Levine offers a richly detailed, ingeniously organized introduction to the cornerstone works of Western social thought. Visions has three meanings, each of which corresponds to a part of the book. In Part One, Levine presents the ways sociologists have rendered accounts of their discipline, as a series of narratives - or life stories - that build upon each other, in an effort to envisage a coherent past for the sake of a purposive present. In Part Two, Levine offers his own narrative, a dialogue among the strands of the sociological tradition: Hellenic, British, French, German, Marxian, Italian, and American. Clearly and concisely, he tracks the sociological imagination through a series of conversations across generations. From classic philosophy to pragmatism, Levine maps the web of a visionary statements from which social science has grown in response to three recurring questions: How shall we live? What makes humans moral creatures? How do we understand the world? He anchors the creation of social knowledge to ethical foundations, and shows how differences in those foundations disposed the shapers of modern social science to proceed in vastly different ways. In Part Three, Levine sets the crisis of fragmentation in social science against the fragmentation of experience and community. By reconstructing the history of social thought as a series of fundamentally moral engagements with common themes, he suggests new uses for sociology's resources: not only as insight about the nature of modernity, but also as a model of mutually respectful communication in an increasingly fractious world
Subject : Sociology-- History
Subject : Sociology-- Philosophy
LC Classification : ‭HM19‬‭.L48 1995‬
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