Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Economy and Society

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
December 19, 1978

ISBN
  
0-520-03500-3

Author
  
Max Weber

Translator
  
Guenther Roth

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1922

Subject
  
Sociology

Genre
  
Non-fiction

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Original title
  
Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Grundriß der verstehenden Soziologie

Publisher
  
University of California Press

Similar
  
Works by Max Weber, Sociology books, Economics books

Economy and Society is a book by political economist and sociologist Max Weber, published posthumously in Germany in 1922 by his wife Marianne. Alongside The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, it is considered to be one of Weber's most important works. Extremely broad in scope, the book covers numerous themes including religion, economics, politics, public administration, and sociology. A complete translation of the work was not published in English until 1968.

Contents

In 1998, the International Sociological Association listed this work as the most important sociological book of the 20th century.

Sociology

Sociology...is a science concerning itself with the interpretive understanding of social action and thereby with a causal explanation of its course and consequences. We shall speak of "action" insofar as the acting individual attaches a subjective meaning to his behavior...

Ideal types (pure types)

For the purposes of a typological scientific analysis it is convenient to treat all irrational, affectually determined elements of behavior as factors of deviation from a conceptually pure type of rational action. For example a panic on the stock exchange can be most conveniently analysed by attempting to determine first what the course of action would have been if it had not be influenced by irrational affects; it is then possible to introduce the irrational components as accounting for the observed deviations from this hypothetical course...Only in this way is it possible to assess the causal significance of irrational factors as accounting for the deviation of this type. The construction of a purely rational course of action in such cases serves the sociologist as a type (ideal type) which has the merit of clear understandability and lack of ambiguity. By comparison with this it is possible to understand the ways in which actual action is influenced by irrational factors of all sorts, such as affects and errors, in that they account for the deviation from the line of conduct which would be expected on hypothesis that the action were purely rational.

Orientations of social action

Social action, like all action, may be oriented in four ways:

(1) instrumentally rational (zweckrational), that is, determined by expectations as to the behavior of objects in the environment and of other human beings; these expectations are used as "conditions" or "means" for the attainment of the actor's own rationally pursued and calculated ends;

(2) value-rational (wertrational), that is, determined by a conscious belief in the value for its own sake of some ethical, aesthetic, religious, or other form of behavior, independently of its prospects of success;

(3) affectual (especially emotional), that is, determined by the actor's specific affects and feeling states;

traditional

Religion

In Economy and Society (part two, chapter VI), Weber distinguished three ideal types of religious activity: world-flying mysticism, world-rejecting asceticism, and inner-worldly asceticism.

He also separated magic as pre-religious activity.

References

Economy and Society Wikipedia