The Comparative Rôle of the Group Concept in Ward's "Dynamic Sociology" and Contemporary American Sociology

الغلاف الأمامي
University of Chicago, 1920 - 133 من الصفحات
 

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الصفحة 399 - ... in the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the first quarter of the twentieth century.
الصفحة 453 - A separate individual is an abstraction unknown to experience, and so likewise is society when regarded as something apart from individuals. The real thing is Human Life, which may be considered either in an individual aspect or in a social, that is to say, a general, aspect; but is always, as a matter of fact, both individual and general. In other words,
الصفحة 392 - ... municipal hospital, will use the national telegraph system to tell them not to walk through the municipal park, but to come by the municipal tramway, to meet him in the municipal...
الصفحة 392 - practical man," oblivious or contemptuous of any theory of the Social Organism or general principles of social organization, has been forced by the necessities of the time, into an ever deepening collectivist channel.
الصفحة 392 - The individualist town councillor will walk along the municipal pavement, lit by municipal gas and cleansed by municipal brooms with municipal water, and seeing by the municipal clock in the municipal market, that he is too early to meet his children coming from the municipal school...
الصفحة 453 - society » and « individuals » do not denote separable phenomena, but are simply collective and distributive aspects of the same thing...
الصفحة 407 - We at last have a true key to the solution of the question of the origin of society.1 In his subsequent writings he utilized the group conflict as the fundamental concept in treating of the origin of the state as we now know it.2 Although accepting this theory he did not alter his earlier position regarding the anti-social nature of man. On this point he says in a later work: In Dynamic Sociology I took strong ground against the Aristotelian idea that man is a gregarious animal and the Comtean doctrine...
الصفحة 456 - MIND is an organic whole made up of cooperating individualities, in somewhat the same way that the music of an orchestra is made up of divergent but related sounds. No one would think it necessary or reasonable to divide the music into two kinds, that made by the whole and that of particular instruments, and no more are there two kinds of mind, the social mind and the individual mind. When we study the social mind we merely fix our attention on larger aspects and relations rather than on the narrower...

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