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  • 2010-2014  (5)
  • Mannheim, Karl  (5)
  • Hoboken : Taylor and Francis  (5)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken : Taylor and Francis
    ISBN: 9780415150828
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (655 p)
    Parallel Title: Print version Freedom Power & Democ Plan V 4
    DDC: 301
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: First published in 1951
    Description / Table of Contents: Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright; Foreword; A Note on the Work of Karl Mannheim; Preface; Contents; Part I. Diagnosis of the Situation; 1. Main Symptoms of the Crisis; I. New Social Techniques Making for Minority Rule; II. The New Techniques and the Power Complex; III. From Communal Economy through Free Competition to Monopolies; IV. Displacement of Self-Regulating Small Groups; V. Disintegration of Traditional Group Controls; VI. Failure of Large-Scale Co-ordination; VII. Disintegration of Co-operative Controls; VIII. Disruptive Effects of Class Antagonism
    Description / Table of Contents: IX. Disintegration of PersonalitiesX. Disintegration of Consensus and of Religious Bonds; 2. Alternative Responses to the Situation; I. Totalitarian Responses; II. The Pessimistic View of Fascism; III. The Utopian Hope of Marxism; IV. Toward Democratic Planning; V. The Emerging New Pattern; Part II. Democratic Planning and Changing Institutions; 3. On Power-A Chapter in Political Sociology; I. Freedom and the Social Order; II. Toward a Democratic Theory of Power; III. The Three Basic Forms of Power; IV. Power in Personal Relationships; V. Power Concentration in Functions
    Description / Table of Contents: VI. Significant LessonsVII. Power Concentration in Groups; VIII. The Nature and Power of Communal Sentiment; IX. Functional and Communal Power at Variance; X. Basic Power Patterns of Today; XI. Basic Power Patterns in International Relations; XII. Abuses of Power and Their Prevention; 4. The Ruling Class in Capitalist and Communist Society; I. The Russian Experiment Appraised; II. The Pattern of Capitalist Society; III. The Pattern of Communist Society; IV. The Value of Graded Rewards; V. Desirable and Undesirable Equality; VI. Overlapping of Status Distinctions; VII. Power Differentiation
    Description / Table of Contents: VIII. Lessons of the Russian ExperimentIX. Methods of Selecting Leaders; X. Scientific Selection and Its Limitations; XI. Co-ordinated Methods of Selection; XII. Broadening the Basis of Selection (The British Situation); XIII. Social Value of Functions Performed by the Ruling Class; XIV. Humanities or Social Studies?; XV. The Danger of Overassimilation; XVI. Functions of a Reconstructed Ruling Class; 5. The Reformation of Politics; I. Politics and Institutional Controls; II. Maxims on the Policy of Preventive Planning; III. Control of the Social Structure; IV. Control of the Economy
    Description / Table of Contents: V. Control of the Armed ForcesVI. The Civil Service; VII. Democratic Control of Press and Radio; 6. Democratic Control of Government in a Planned Society; I. Historical Limitations of the Modern Democratic Idea; II. Two Obsolete Safeguards of Democracy; III. Nine Virtues of Representative Government; IV. The Democratic Process; Part III. New Man-New Values; 7. From Custom to Social Science; I. The Idea of Social Education; II. The New Science of Human Behavior; III. Personal Relationships, Primary Groups, and Their Educational Significance; IV. Organized Groups and Their Educational Impact
    Description / Table of Contents: V. Some Social Institutions and Their Educational Impact
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken : Taylor and Francis
    ISBN: 9780415060547
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (377 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Series Statement: Routledge Classics in Sociology
    Parallel Title: Print version Ideology and Utopia
    DDC: 301
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Ideology and Utopia argues that ideologies are mental fictions whose function is to veil the true nature of a given society. They originate unconsciously in the minds of those who seek to stabilise a social order. Utopias are wish dreams that inspire the collective action of opposition groups which aim at the entire transformation of society. Mannheim shows these two opposing elements to dominate not only our social thought but even unexpectedly to penetrate into the most scientific theories in philosophy, history and the social sciences.This new edition contains a new preface by
    Description / Table of Contents: Front Cover; Ideology and Utopia; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Foreword; Preface; Preface to the Collected Works; Books and Monographs; I. Preliminary Approach to the Problem; 1. The Sociological Concept of Thought; 2. The Contemporary Predicament of Thought; 3. The Origin of the Modern Epistemological, Psychological and Sociological Points of View; 4. Control of the Collective Unconscious as a Problem of our Age; II. Ideology and Utopia; 1. Definition of Concepts; 2. The Concept ofIdeology in Historical Perspective; 3. From the Particular to the Total Conception of Ideology
    Description / Table of Contents: 4. Objectivity and Bias5. The Transition from the Theory of Ideology to the Sociology of Knowledge; 6. The Non-Evaluative Conception of Ideology; 7. From the Non-Evaluative to the Evaluative Conception of Ideology; 8. Ontological Judgments Implicit in the Non-Evaluative Conception; 9. The Problem of ""False Consciousness""; 10. The Quest for Reality through Ideological and Utopian analysis; III. The Prospects of Scientific Politics: The Relationship between Social Theory and Political Practice; 1. Why is there no Science of Politics?; 2. The Political and Social Determinants of Knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: 3. Synthesis of the Various Perspectives as a Problem of Political Sociology4. The Sociological Problem of the ""intelligentsia""; 5. The Nature of Political Knowledge; 6. The Communicability of Political Knowledge; 7. Three Varieties of the Sociology of Knowledge; IV. The Utopian Mentality; 1. Utopia, Ideology, and the Problem of Reality; 2. Wish-fulfilment and Utopian Mentality; 3. Changes in the Configuration of the Utopian Mentality: Its Stages in Modern Times; (a) The First Form of the Utopian Mentality: The Orgiastic Chiliasm of the Anabaptists
    Description / Table of Contents: (b) The Second Form of the Utopian Mentality: The Liberal-Humanitarian Idea(c) The Third Form of the Utopian Mentality:The Conservative Idea; (d) The Fourth Form of the Utopian Mentality: The Socialist-Communist Utopia; 4. Utopia in the Present Situation; V. The Sociology of Knowledge; 1. Its Nature and Scope; (a) Definition and Subdivision of the Sociology of Knowledge; (b) Sociology of Knowledge and the Theory of ideology; 2. The Two Divisions of the Sociology of Knowledge; (A) The Theory of the Social Detennination of Knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: Purely empirical aspect of the investigation of the social determination of knowledge.Social processes influencing the process of knowledge.; Essential penetration of the social process into the ""perspective"" of thought.; The special approach characteristic of the Sociologyof Knowledge.; The acquisition of perspective as a precondition forthe Sociology of Knowledge.; Relationism.; Particularization.; (B) Epistemological Consequences of the Sociology of knowledge; Epistemology and the Special Sciences.; 3. Demonstration of the Partial Nature of Traditional Epistemology
    Description / Table of Contents: (a) Orientation towards Natural Science as a model of thought
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken : Taylor and Francis
    ISBN: 9780415150842
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (203 p)
    Parallel Title: Print version Systematic Sociology V 8
    DDC: 301
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: First published in 1957
    Description / Table of Contents: SYSTEMATIC SOCIOLOGY:AN INTRODUCTION TOTHE STUDY OF SOCIETYCollected Works Volume Eight; Copyright; Contents; Editorial Preface; Introduction: The Scope of Sociology and of the SocialSciences; Part 1:Man And His Psychic Equipment; Chapter I Man And His Psychic Equipment; 1. Behaviour, situation and adjustment; 2.i. Habits and the problem of 'instincts'.; ii. The habit-making mechanism; 3. Evolution in the models of imitation; 4. Sociological and psychoanalytic descriptions of man.; i. Repression; ii. Neurosis, reaction formation and projection; iii. Rationalisation
    Description / Table of Contents: iv. Symbolisation and daydreamingv. Sublimation and idealisation and their social significance; Chapter II Man And His Psychic Equipment; 5. Social guidance of psychic energies; 6. Object fixation and transference of the libido; 7. Sociology of types of behaviour:; i. Attitudes and wishes; ii. Interests; Part 2:The Most Elementary Social Processes; Chapter III A. Social Contact and Social Distance; 1. Primary and secondary contacts; 2. Sympathetic and categoric contacts; 3. Social distance; 4. Maintaining social hierarchy; 5. Existential distancing
    Description / Table of Contents: 6. The creating of distance within a single personalityChapter IV B. Isolation; 1. The social functions of isolation; 2. The various kinds of social isolation; 3. Forms of privacy; Chapter V C. Individualisation; 1. Individualisation as a process of becoming different; 2. Individualisation on the level of self-regarding attitudes; 3. The individualisation of the wishes through objects; 4. Individualisation as a kind of introversion; D. Individualisation and Socialisation; Chapter VI E. Competition And Monopoly; 1. The function of competition; 2. Some consequences of competition
    Description / Table of Contents: 3. Restrictions of the methods of competition4. Social monopoly; Chapter VII F. Selection; G. The Main Effects of Competition and Selection On Mental Life; H. Co-Operation and the Division of Labour; 1. The purposes of co-operation; 2. Co-operation, compulsion and mutual aid; 3. The social function of the division of labour; 4. The social valuation of labour; 5. The integrating function of the division of labour; Part 3:Social Integration; Chapter VIII A. The Sociology of Groups; 1. The crowd; 2. The public; 3. Abstract masses and the abstract public; 4. Organised groups
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter IX The Sociology of Groups (Continued)5. The types of groupings; 6. The state; Chapter X B. The Class Problem; 1. Social position; 2.Class consciousness and political parties; Part 4:Social Stability and Social Change; Chapter XI Factors of Social Stability; 1. Social control and authority; 2. Customs as a form of social control; 3. Law as a form of social control; 4. Prestige and leadership; 5. The philosophical and sociological interpretation of values; Chapter XII Causes of Social Change; 1. The Marxist theory of social change
    Description / Table of Contents: 2. Class and caste struggles as causes of social change
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken : Taylor and Francis
    ISBN: 9780415150811
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (336 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Parallel Title: Print version Diagnosis Of Our Time V 3
    DDC: 304
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: First published in 1943. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
    Description / Table of Contents: Cover; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; PREFACE; I. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE NEW SOCIAL TECHNIQUES; II. THE THIRD WAY: A MILITANT DEMOCRACY; III. THE STRATEGIC SITUATION; I. DIAGNOSIS OF OUR TIME; I. CONFLICTING PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE; II. CONTROVERSY ABOUT THE CAUSES OF OUR SPIRITUAL CRISIS; III. SOME SOCIOLOGICAL FACTORS UPSETTING THE PROCESS OF VALUATION IN MODERN SOCIETY; IV. THE MEANING OF DEMOCRATIC PLANNING IN THE SPHERE OF VALUATIONS; II. THE CRISIS IN VALUATION; I. THE SOCIOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF YOUTH IN SOCIETY; II. THE SPECIAL FUNCTION OF YOUTH IN ENGLAND IN THE PRESENT SITUATION
    Description / Table of Contents: III. MAIN CONCLUSIONSIII. THE PROBLEM OF YOUTH IN MODERN SOCIETY; I. THE CHANGING FEATURES OF MODERN EDUCATIONAL PRACTICE; II. SOME REASONS FOR THE NEED OF SOCIOLOGICAL INTEGRATION IN EDUCATION; III. THE RÔLE OF SOCIOLOGY IN A MILITANT DEMOCRACY; IV. EDUCATION, SOCIOLOGY AND THE PROBLEM OF SOCIAL AWARENESS; I. THE SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO EDUCATION; II. INDIVIDUAL ADJUSTMENT AND COLLECTIVE DEMANDS; III. THE PROBLEM OF GROUP ANALYSIS; V. MASS EDUCATION AND GROUP ANALYSIS; I. SYSTEMATIC DISORGANIZATION OF SOCIETY; II. EFFECT ON THE INDIVIDUAL; III. THE "NEW ORDER"; IV. MAKING THE NEW LEADERS
    Description / Table of Contents: VI. NAZI GROUP STRATEGYPart I. Christianity in the Age of Planning; (1) Christianity at the cross-roads. Will it associate itself with the masses or side with ruling minorities?; (2) Why the Liberal era could do without religion. The need for spiritual integration in a planned society; (3) Catholicism, Protestantism and the planned democratic order; (4) The meaning of religious and moral recommendations in a democratically planned order; (5) The move towards an ethics in which the right patterns of behaviour are more positively stated than in the previous age
    Description / Table of Contents: (6) The tension between the private and parochial world on the one hand and the planned social order on the other(7) Ethical rules must be tested in the social context in which they are expected to work; (8) Can sociology, the most secularized approach to the problems of human life, co-operate with theological thinking?; (9) The concepts of Christian archetypes; Part II. Christian Values and the Changing Environment; (1) The methods of historical reinterpretation. The passing and the lasting elements in the idea of Progress; (2) Planning and religious experience
    Description / Table of Contents: (3) The meaning of Planning for Freedom in the case of religious experience(4) The four essential spheres of religious experience; (5) The problem of genuinely archaic and of pseudo-religious experience; (6) Valuation and paradigmatic experience; (7) The sociological meaning of paradigmatic experience; (8) Summing up. New problems; (9) The emerging social pattern in its economic aspects; (10) The emerging social pattern and the problem of power and social control
    Description / Table of Contents: (11) The nature of the co-operative effort that is wanted if the transition from an unplanned to a planned society is to be understood
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken : Taylor and Francis
    ISBN: 9780415075534
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (263 p)
    Edition: 2nd ed
    Series Statement: Routledge Classics in Sociology
    Parallel Title: Print version Essays on the Sociology of Culture
    DDC: 306
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Karl Mannheim, in this book originally published in 1956, sets out his ideas of intellectuals as producers of culture
    Description / Table of Contents: Cover; Essays on the Sociology of Culture; Copyright; Contents; Introduction; Part One: Towards The Sociology of the Mind an Introduction; I. First Approach to the Subject; 1. Hegel Reconsidered. From the Phenomenology to the Sociology of the Mind; 2. The Science of Society and the Sociology of the Mind. Difficulties of a Synthesis; 3. Tentative Nature of the Inquiry. Its Initial Objective: A Critique of the False Concepts of Society and Mind; II. The False and the Proper Concepts of History and Society; 1. The Theory of an Immanent History of Thought, and Why it Emerged
    Description / Table of Contents: Digression on Art History2. False Polarization of the Attributes 'Material' and 'Ideal'; 3. The False Concepts of History, Dialectics, and Mediacy; 4. The Mediate Character of Roles. The Social Circulation of Perceptions and Complementary Situations; 5. Towards an Adequate Concept of Society; 6. A Preliminary Outline of the Steps towards the Sociology of the Mind; 7. The Three Types of Sociology and the Corresponding Levels of the Sociology of the Mind. Structure and Causality; III. The Proper and Improper Concept of the Mind; 1. A Second Review of its Hegelian Version
    Description / Table of Contents: 2. The Genesis of the Mind Concept3. The Subjective and Objective Manifestations of the Mind. The Social Genesis of Meaning; 4. The Suprapersonal Character of Meaning; 5. Critique of the Entelechy as a Conceptual Model; 6. The Explanatory and the Expository Procedure. The Structure of Events; 7. The Question whether the World Has Structure; 8. The Causal Account and the Expository Explanation Re-examined; 9. The Structural and the Random Concept of Causation. The Problem of Multiple Causation; 10. Historiography and the Structural View; 11. The Matrix of Works and of Action
    Description / Table of Contents: 12. The Discovery of the Structural Relationship Between Action and WorksIV. An Outline of the Sociology of the Mind; 1. The Sociology of the Mind on the Axiomatic Level. The Ontology of the Social and its Bearing on the Historical Character of Thought; 2. The Sociology of the Mind on the Level of Comparative Typology; 3. The Sociology of the Mind on the Level of Historical Individuation; V. Recapitulation: the Sociology of the Mind Aread of Inquiry; Part Two: The Problem of the Intelligentsia an Inquiry into its Past and Present Role; 1. The Self-Discovery of Social Groups
    Description / Table of Contents: 2. Outlines of a Sociological Theory of the Intelligentsia3. How Social Groups are Identified; 4. Types of Intelligentsia; 5. The Contemporary Intellectual; 6. The Historical Roles of the Intelligentsia; (a) The Social Background of Intellectuals; (b) The Affiliations of Intellectuals and Artists; (c) The Intelligentsia and the Classes; (d) The Social Habitat of Intellectuals; 7. The Natural History of the Intellectual; 8. The Contemporary Situation of the Intelligentsia; Part Three: The Democratization of Culture; I. Some Problems of Political Democracy at the Stage of its Full Development
    Description / Table of Contents: II. The Problem of Democratization as a General Cultural Phenomenon
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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