Description |
xlii, 423 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages xxxix-xlii) and index. |
Summary |
Overview This is the finest single-volume edition of Sumner's works ever to appear.-Ronald Lora, University of Toledo William Graham Sumner is the "forgotten man" of American intellectual history. Too often dismissed or only superficially understood, his interpretations are now attracting closer scrutiny and appreciation. He is remembered chiefly as one of the founding fathers of sociology. He was also a strong supporter of classical liberalism during a time when liberalism was being transformed into a belief in statism. Sumner's analysis of the relation between the individual and society is deeper and more sophisticated than is commonly thought. For students of American history and politics, the essays reveal the complexity of American political and social thought. For observers of the contemporary social scene, they raise issues concerning the relation of liberty to property and both to government that remain as vital and unresolved as they were a century ago.-- provided by publisher. |
Contents |
I. Preacher. Individualism (1871) -- Tradition and progress (1872) -- Solidarity of the human race (1873). II. Educational reformer. The "ways and means" for our colleges (1870) -- What our boys are reading (1878) -- Our colleges before the country (1884) -- Discipline (1880 or 1889). III. Polemicist. Republican government (1877) -- Presidential elections and civil-service reform (1881) -- The argument against protective taxes (1881) -- The philosophy of strikes (1883) -- The family monopoly (1888) -- Democracy and plutocracy (1888-1889) -- The concentration of wealth: its economic justification (1902). IV. Social theorist. Socialism (1880s) -- Sociology (1881) -- The forgotten man (1883) -- The survival of the fittest (1884) -- Laissez-faire (1886) -- The state as an "ethical person" (1887) -- Liberty (1887-1889) -- The absurd effort to make the world over (1894). |
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V. Anti-imperialist. The fallacy of territorial expansion (1896) -- The conquest of the United States by Spain (1898) -- War (1903). VI. Sociologist. Purposes and consequences (ca. 1900-1906) -- The scientific attitude of mind (1905) -- Mores and statistics (ca. 1900-1906) -- Science and mores (ca. 1900-1906) -- On mores and progress (ca. 1900-1906) -- Folkways (1906). VII. Prophet. The bequests of the nineteenth century to the twentieth (1901) -- The mores of the present and the future (1909). |
Subject |
Social sciences.
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71.01 history of sociology. (NL-LeOCL)077596951
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89.06 political philosophy. (NL-LeOCL)077608739
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Social sciences. (OCoLC)fst01122877
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Maatschappij.
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Politieke ideeën.
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Sumner, William Graham, 1840-1910. (NL-LeOCL)071327614
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Indexed Term |
Social sciences |
Added Author |
Bannister, Robert C.
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ISBN |
0865971005 (alk. paper) |
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9780865971004 (alk. paper) |
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0865971013 (pbk. ; alk. paper) |
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9780865971011 (pbk. ; alk. paper) |
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