The New Sociological ImaginationSAGE, 2006 M02 7 - 240 pages C. Wright Mills′ classic The Sociological Imagination has inspired generations of students to study Sociology. However, the book is nearly half a century old. What would a book address, aiming to attract and inform students in the 21st century? This is the task that Steve Fuller sets himself in this major new invitation to study Sociology. The book:
This book sets the agenda for imagining sociology in the 21st century and will attract students and professionals alike. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 71
Page 22
... human beings' may be politically and scientifically constructed. This is the primary normative meaning of 'society ... nature of the human project suggests that failure is inevitable. Lest we capitulate too willingly to this judgement ...
... human beings' may be politically and scientifically constructed. This is the primary normative meaning of 'society ... nature of the human project suggests that failure is inevitable. Lest we capitulate too willingly to this judgement ...
Page 24
... human nature', and even the original philosopher of culture, Johann Gottfried von Herder, spoke of society as imposing a 'second nature'.When it comes to the human condition, the two great academic cultures prefer to study humanity ...
... human nature', and even the original philosopher of culture, Johann Gottfried von Herder, spoke of society as imposing a 'second nature'.When it comes to the human condition, the two great academic cultures prefer to study humanity ...
Page 27
... natural sciences, the latter what marks it from the humanities. Both words have been invoked to call into question the status of a species-based human nature.The distinctiveness of meaning attributions points to irreducible differences ...
... natural sciences, the latter what marks it from the humanities. Both words have been invoked to call into question the status of a species-based human nature.The distinctiveness of meaning attributions points to irreducible differences ...
Page 28
... humans have transformed the natural environment to enable the flourishing of those who, from a strictly biological standpoint, are by no means the fittest. In his 1893 Romanes Lecture, Huxley memorably claimed that the human condition ...
... humans have transformed the natural environment to enable the flourishing of those who, from a strictly biological standpoint, are by no means the fittest. In his 1893 Romanes Lecture, Huxley memorably claimed that the human condition ...
Page 29
... human misery has shifted to care for the environment at large. At a ... humans always the privileged members of society? The question arises once we consider ... nature' that sharply distinguishes us from the 'brutes' is little more than ...
... human misery has shifted to care for the environment at large. At a ... humans always the privileged members of society? The question arises once we consider ... nature' that sharply distinguishes us from the 'brutes' is little more than ...
Contents
1 | |
9 | |
11 | |
23 | |
31 | |
41 | |
Chapter 5 Towards a Renewal of Welfare and the Rediscovery of British Sociology | 54 |
Todays Orwellian Turn in Social Science | 62 |
Chapter 10 Who or What Deserves Our Sympathy? | 118 |
Humanity as the Endangered Species of Our Times | 129 |
Chapter 11 The Coming WorldHistoric Struggle in Science and Religion | 131 |
Chapter 12 Understanding the Fundamentalist Backlash against Secularism | 147 |
The Sarwinian Turn in Development Policy | 161 |
Chapter 14 Might we become Nazis in Paradise? | 183 |
Is there no Escape from Human Nature? | 196 |
Glossary | 206 |
The Biological Challenge to Social Science | 77 |
Chapter 7 The Hidden Biological Past of Classical Social Theory | 79 |
Chapter 8 Making the Difference between Sociology and Biology Matter Today | 90 |
The Struggle for Marxs Successor | 107 |
References | 215 |
Index | 228 |
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Common terms and phrases
20th century 21st century academic altruism animals anthropic basis behaviour bioliberalism biological bioprospecting called capacity capitalist Chapter Christianity classical common concept cultural Darwinian Left Darwinism Dawkins disabled distinction Durkheim E.O. Wilson ecological economic Émile Durkheim Enlightenment environment epistemic equally ethic evolutionary evolutionary psychology forms Fuller genes genetic German global Hobbes Homo sapiens human condition human nature humanity’s Huxley idea individuals innovation intellectual Islam karmic knowledge liberal Marx Marxist means Mill modern Moreover namely natural sciences natural selection Nazi Neo-Darwinian synthesis neo-liberal Nevertheless non-humans normative one’s organisms original perhaps Peter Singer philosophical political positivism positivists postmodern potential presupposes production racial hygiene realized redistribution regarded religions Richard Dawkins scientific secular selfish selfish gene sense sensibility simply Singer social science social scientists socialist society sociobiology sociologists sociology sociology’s species standpoint strategy tendency theorists theory tion today’s tradition turn ultimately Weber welfare world-view