The Origins of Sociology in France: The Historical Discontinuity of the Counterrevolution |
Contents
CHAPTER | 23 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 128 |
CHAPTER SIX DISCONTINUITY AND COUNTERREVOLUTION | 157 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accepted American ancien regime argued aristocracy Aron Auguste Comte believed bourgeois cial ciology civilization Comte's concept Condorcet constitutional contemporary continuity Counterrevolution counterrevolutionary crisis critical culture Despite discipline discourse doctrine Durkheim earlier early economic eighteenth ence Enlightenment episteme epistemological break European field Foucault France French Revolution fundamental Gouldner historical discontinuity history of sociology human Ibid ideology individual industrial intellectual Joseph de Maistre king Kuhn Kuhn's language legitimacy liberal losing ideas Louis de Bonald Maistre and Bonald Maistre's Marx Marxist monarchy Montesquieu moral natural sciences neo-Marxists nineteenth century ology origins of sociology paradigm Paris Parsons past philosophical political Press problem progress radical rationalist reform religion religious Restoration revolutionary role Rousseau royalist Saint-Simon and Comte scientific sense soci social science society sociologists sociology's strategy of discontinuity theoretical theorists thinkers tion Tocqueville tory tradition University Weber whig historians whig interpretation York Zeitlin