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| | Max Weber Encyclopedia Article @ CompleteIdiots.com (Complete Idiots) |
 | | Weber's work is parallel to Sombart's treatise of the same phenomenon, which however located the rise of Capitalism in Judaism. |  | | Weber viewed democracy as a form of charismatic leadership where the "demagogue imposes his will on the masses." For this reason, the European left is highly critical of Weber for, albeit unwittingly, "preparing the intellectual groundwork for the leadership position of Adolf Hitler." |  | | The congress was mainly against Weber's demands because it supported the Prussian Junkers, but Weber influenced his friends and allies, including the pastor Friedrich Naumann, who later became an influential politician and one of the founders of the liberal Deutsche Demokratische Partei after WW I. In 1905, Weber changed his mind. |
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http://completeidiots.com/encyclopedia/Max_Weber
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| | Sociology 250 - Notes on Max Weber |
 | | Weber's father (Max Weber, Sr.) was a bureaucrat, part of the German establishment, and a member of the National Liberal Party who sat in the Prussian House and the Reichstag. |  | | Max Weber (1864-1920) was a German writer, academic (historian and sociologist), who was sometimes involved in the field of politics. |  | | Marianne Weber's biography argued that Max Weber believed that the purpose of political and social institutions is the development of autonomous, free personality. |
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http://uregina.ca/~gingrich/s30f99.htm
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| | Max Weber's View of Objectivity in Social Science |
 | | Similarly, Weber believed that objective comparisons among systems could also be made once a particular end had been established, acknowledged, and agreed upon, a position that allowed Weber to make what he considered objective comparisons among such economic systems as capitalism and socialism. |  | | Max Weber thought that "statements of fact are one thing, statements of value another, and any confusing of the two is impermissible," Ralf Dahrendorf writes in his essay "Max Weber and Modern Social Science," acknowledging that Weber clarified the difference between |  | | Portis writes that Weber, in his Freiburg inaugural address, said "political economy was a `political science,' in the sense that it must proceed from a value perspective." 24 More crucially, Portis goes on to quote Weber as writing that "`there is no "objective" scientific analysis of culture... |
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http://www.criticism.com/md/weber1.html
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| | Max Weber Studies |
 | | Weber felt compelled to develop this case in response to Werner Sombart, The Jews and Modern Capitalism (1911), in which an alternative to Weber's argument concerning the Protestant sources of modern capitalism is presented. |  | | Regarding methodology, Weber's major criticism is that political economy is value-prejudiced, its standpoint is "the increase of the 'wealth' of population", taken as something indisputable and self-evident. |  | | Like Weber before them, Boltanski and Chiapello associate this spirit with both a new conduct of life (Lebensführung in Weber's terms) in which individuals are set new challenges, and with a new form of capitalism's self-legitimation: the 'project polis'. |
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http://www.maxweberstudies.org/anconf.htm
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| | SocioSite: MAX WEBER [1864-1920] |
 | | Pierrotte presents some representative criticism of Weber's thesis, and argues that although his thesis is not perfect, non of the critics have managed to destroy the basis premise by which Weber sought to explain the emerge of capitalism. |  | | Max Weber's contribution to the theory of social inequality and classes (in Dutch). |  | | The bureacracy model of Weber and his references to a theory of the firm. |
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http://www.sociosite.net/topics/weber.php
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| | WEBER ON BUREAUCRACY |
 | | Weber speaks of 'credentialism', the preoccupation evident in modern societies with formal educational qualifications. |  | | Weber also speaks of 'prebends' or 'benefices', meaning an office to which is attached some income-yielding property, e.g. |  | | But Weber does not believe that there is no point in resisting the inevitable. |
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http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/y64l09.html
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| | Verstehen: Max Weber's HomePage |
 | | Some have seriously misinterpreted Weber and have claimed that he liked bureaucracy, that he believed that bureaucracy was an "ideal" organization. |  | | According to Weber, because bureaucracy is a form of organization superior to all others, further bureaucratization and rationalization may be an inescapable fate. |  | | Michels (1915) was a socialist and was disturbed to find that the socialist parties of Europe, despite their democratic ideology and provisions for mass participation, seemed to be dominated by their leaders, just as the traditional conservative parties. |
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http://www.faculty.rsu.edu/~felwell/Theorists/Weber/Whome.htm
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| | WEBER LINKS page http |
 | | Weber, Max (1947 Max Weber: The Theory of Social and Economic Organization. |  | | What is interesting and pioneering about Weber's knowledge organization, is that it is based on a theory of power. |  | | Bureaucracy to Weber was the first knowledge organizations. |
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http://cbae.nmsu.edu/~dboje/teaching/503/weber_links.html
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| | Weberian Sociology of Religion |
 | | In this way, Weber introduced the precept of an empathetic understanding of a religious culture. |  | | The goal is to make Weber's texts available all over the world. |  | | Max Weber's Original Texts on CD-ROM for Mac |
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http://www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/abukuma
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| | Weber bibliography |
 | | Max Weber's analysis of the rise of monotheism: a reconstruction |  | | Max Weber and the theory of modern politics |  | | Wilson, H.T. The Impact of Ntionalist Ideology on Political Philosophy: the case of Weber and Wilhelmine Ger. |
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http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~stephan/Sociology/302/biblio/Weber.html
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| | Glossary of People: We |
 | | During this period, Weber promoted the need for social theory to adopt a value-free methodology, and he engaged himself in comparative studies of Eastern religions with those of Christian Europe. |  | | In his famous The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism published in 1905, Weber attributed the success of German capitalism to the psychological consequences of Calvinism. |  | | Born to a wealthy, liberal, and staunchly Calvinist family, Weber left home to attend the University of Heidelberg in 1882. |
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http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/w/e.htm
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| | Max Weber |
 | | In the Weber family, Max’s father occupied the role of the paterfamilias. |  | | As early as in 1883-1884, when Weber served in the army in the Alsace, Max Weber Sr. |  | | In politics the cosmopolitan bourgeois Max Weber Sr. |
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http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/research/weber2.html
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| | SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY |
 | | MAX WEBER The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism |  | | It is not the case for Weber that ''the ruling ideas of any epoch are the ideas of the ruling classes,'' however. |  | | He will also consider Judaism, since it is an important precursor to Christianity and Islam and because of its significance for the development of the economic ethic of the West. |
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http://ssr1.uchicago.edu/PRELIMS/Theory/weber.html
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| | Max Weber Online |
 | | All images and text on this Max Weber page are copyright 1999-2005 by John Malyon/Artcyclopedia, unless otherwise noted. |  | | Search Amazon for books related to Max Weber |  | | Search AllPosters for reproductions of works by Max Weber |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/weber_max.html
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| | Max Weber |
 | | Max Weber is one of the best known figures in sociological theory. |  | | This comprehensive site offers multiple links to Weber's perspectives on class status and party, legitimacy, bureaucracy, and both politics and science as vocations. |  | | Additionally, Weber’s work with religion and capitalism involved cross-cultural historical research. |
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http://www.runet.edu/~junnever/theory/weber.htm
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| | Max Weber Studies |
 | | The journal asserts the continuing place of Weber in the conversation of both classical and contemporary social and cultural theory. |  | | It offers extensive reviews of every new volume published by the Max Weber Gesamtausgabe and analyses the emerging work-history of Weber's writings. |  | | The journal is an indispensable source for the translation of new Weber texts and the publication of unpublished correspondence. |
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http://www.maxweberstudies.org
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| | Philosophical Dictionary: Warheit-West |
 | | Ultimately, Weber supposed, ethical and political commitments are properly embraced without any effort to supply their rational foundations. |  | | Max Weber: An Introduction to His Life and Work |  | | Max Weber held that all social science is properly Wertfrei ("value-free"). |
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http://www.philosophypages.com/dy/w.htm
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| | Max Weber's Approaches |
 | | Rejecting Karl Marx's evolutionary law of class society, or Emile Durkheim's sustained law of moral society, Weber established the understanding sociology of the subjective meaning of religious action or inaction. |  | | The goal of Weber's sociology of religion is to understand religious action from the subjective meaning of the actor rationally and also emphatically; it is not to establish the laws of religion and society, or to extract the essence of religious action. |  | | Weber holds that there is no universal law of society as supposed in natural science, or the law of history which determines the course of the dynamic mechanically. |
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http://www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/abukuma/outline/weber_appr.html
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| | Weber |
 | | Max Weber is the greatest sociologist who ever lived. |  | | Weber, Max 1904-1905 (1958) The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. |  | | Weber, Max 1903-1917 (1949) The Methodology of the Social Sciences. |
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http://campus.murraystate.edu/academic/faculty/frank.elwell/theory3/Weber.htm
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| | Max Weber`s Pit |
 | | Do You want to be informed about news and updates of Max Weber`s Pit? |
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http://maxweber.com/thepit/eng_thepit.html
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