The American Journal of Sociology, Volume 31Albion W. Small, Ellsworth Faris, Ernest Watson Burgess University of Chicago Press, 1926 Established in 1895 as the first U.S. scholarly journal in its field, AJS remains a leading voice for analysis and research in the social sciences, presenting work on the theory, methods, practice, and history of sociology. AJS also seeks the application of perspectives from other social sciences and publishes papers by psychologists, anthropologists, statisticians, economists, educators, historians, and political scientists. |
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Page 5
... fact . It is the causal or reciprocal order which man reads into nature or society from the anthropocentric ... facts instead of assumptions . He makes the transition from magic and fetishism and metaphysical conceptual logic over to ...
... fact . It is the causal or reciprocal order which man reads into nature or society from the anthropocentric ... facts instead of assumptions . He makes the transition from magic and fetishism and metaphysical conceptual logic over to ...
Page 11
... fact of the existence of social value norms , at least on a limited scale , and constitutes an attempt to utilize them in defending a thesis or point of view . That is , it is itself an attempt to look facts or phenomena into a ...
... fact of the existence of social value norms , at least on a limited scale , and constitutes an attempt to utilize them in defending a thesis or point of view . That is , it is itself an attempt to look facts or phenomena into a ...
Page 15
... facts or events separate individual facts . All the facts of nature are likewise individual and distinctive facts . That is a necessary correlate and consequence of the fact of a dy- namic world ; only in a static world could there be ...
... facts or events separate individual facts . All the facts of nature are likewise individual and distinctive facts . That is a necessary correlate and consequence of the fact of a dy- namic world ; only in a static world could there be ...
Page 17
... fact that ultimately regression may take the place of progress in spite of all the science we are now bringing to bear or can utilize in the statement of ends and criteria and for the control or the realization of progress.12 But ...
... fact that ultimately regression may take the place of progress in spite of all the science we are now bringing to bear or can utilize in the statement of ends and criteria and for the control or the realization of progress.12 But ...
Page 22
... fact , Graebner's posi- tion was attacked at several points . The basic errors of his theo- retical system are , perhaps , these : 1. Graebner underestimates the difficulty of perceiving and evaluating cultural similarities . Even in ...
... fact , Graebner's posi- tion was attacked at several points . The basic errors of his theo- retical system are , perhaps , these : 1. Graebner underestimates the difficulty of perceiving and evaluating cultural similarities . Even in ...
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Common terms and phrases
activities ALBION W Amer analysis aspects attitudes Auguste Comte behavior biological causal century chap chapter Christian church cial civilization classification concept conflict court culture DeGreef desires doctrine Dynamic Sociology economic effect environment ethical fact factors function fundamental human nature Ibid ideals ideas individual industrial influence instincts institutions interest Jour July 25 labor marriage material means ment mental method modern moral Negro organization original persons philosophy physical political present principle problem Professor progress psychic race racial reason relations religion religious Renan result revolution ROBERT E rural Saxon scientific sense social control social forces social process Social Psychology social sciences society sociologists sociology Survey tendency theory thought tion tradition UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO VIII W. I. Thomas World Tomorrow writer York