The Origins of Sociology in France: The Historical Discontinuity of the Counterrevolution |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
CHAPTER TWO DISCONTINUITY IN HISTORY | 23 |
CHAPTER THREE THE LEGITIMACY PROBLEM IN SOCIOLOGY | 54 |
CHAPTER FOUR THE HISTORIES OF SOCIOLOGY | 89 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accepted American apparently argued attempts authority believed Books break called cause central century cial civilization claim common Comte concept Condorcet considered constitutional contemporary continuity counterrevolutionary course crisis critical culture Despite discipline discontinuity discourse Durkheim earlier early economic Enlightenment episteme equally explain fact field followed forces France French Revolution fundamental historians human ideas important individual industrial institutions intellectual interest interpretation king knowledge Kuhn language later laws legitimacy less liberal Louis XVIII Maistre and Bonald Marx Marxist means modern monarchy Montesquieu moral natural nineteenth origins paradigm Paris Parsons past period philosophical political position possible present Press principle problem produced progress question radical reason reform regime rejected religion religious Restoration revolutionary role Saint-Simon scientific sense share simply social science society sociologists sociology strategy theory thought tion tradition true University whig York