Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology, Jilid 1Univ of California Press, 1978 - 1469 halaman Max Weber's Economy and Society is the greatest sociological treatise written in this century. Published posthumously in Germany in the early 1920s, it has become a constitutive part of the modern sociological imagination. |
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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS | xxv |
PREFACE | xxxi |
INTRODUCTION by Guenther Roth | xxxiii |
ITS IMPERSONALITY AND ETHIC Fragment | xxxiv |
BUREAUCRACY | xxxvi |
The Legal Forms of Medieval Trading Enterprises | xl |
The Roman Empire and Imperial Germany | xlvi |
VOLUME 2 | lii |
Forms of Communism | 153 |
Capital Goods and Capital Accounting | 154 |
The Concept of Trade and Its Principal Forms | 156 |
The Concept of Trade and Its Principal FormsContinued | 157 |
29a The Concept of Trade and Its Principal FormsConcluded | 159 |
The Conditions of Maximum Formal Rationality of Capital Accounting | 161 |
The Principal Modes of Capitalistic Orientation of ProfitMaking | 164 |
Currency Money | 166 |
A Political Typology of Antiquity | liv |
The Planning of Economy and Society | lxii |
Rule of the CouncilPatriciate and of the Crafts in Northern Europe 1281 | lxiv |
Appendices | lxvi |
FORMAL AND SUBSTANTIVE RATIONALIZATIONTHEOCRATIC | lxxxii |
POLITICAL COMMUNITIES | lxxxiii |
Conclusion 1002 | lxxxv |
Chapter XII | lxxxviii |
Characteristics of Modern Bureaucracy 956 | xcv |
THE PLEBEIAN CITY 1301 | xcviii |
Chapter X | cii |
Parliament and Government in a Reconstructed Germany | civ |
Acknowledgements | cx |
CONCEPTUAL EXPOSITION | 1 |
Basic Sociological Terms | 3 |
The Definitions of Sociology and of Social Action | 4 |
The Impact | 5 |
The Patrimonial State 1013 | 7 |
INDEX | 8 |
The Maintenance of Patrimonial Officials Benefices in Kind and in Fees 1031 | 10 |
Decentralized and Typified Administration As a Consequence of Appropriation and Monopolization 1038 | 11 |
Defenses of the Patrimonial State Against Disintegration 1042 | 15 |
Patrimonial Rulers versus Local Lords 1055 | 17 |
B Social Action | 22 |
Types of Social Action | 24 |
The Concept of Social Relationship | 26 |
Usage Custom SelfInterest | 29 |
Legitimate Order | 31 |
Convention and Law | 33 |
Tradition Faith Enactment | 36 |
Conflict Competition Selection | 38 |
Communal and Associative Relationships | 40 |
Open and Closed Relationships | 43 |
Representation and Mutual Responsibility | 46 |
The Organization | 48 |
Consensual and Imposed Order in Organizations | 50 |
Administrative and Regulative Order | 51 |
Enterprise Formal Organization Voluntary and Compulsory Association | 52 |
Power and Domination | 53 |
Political and Hierocratic Organizations | 54 |
Notes | 56 |
Chapter II | 61 |
Sociological Categories of Economic Action | 63 |
The Concept of Utility | 68 |
Modes of the Economic Orientation of Action | 69 |
Typical Measures of Rational Economic Action | 71 |
Types of Economic Organizations | 74 |
Media of Exchange Means of Payment Money | 75 |
The Primary Consequences of the Use of Money Credit | 80 |
The Market | 82 |
Formal and Substantive Rationality of Economic Action | 85 |
The Rationality of Monetary Accounting Management and Budgeting | 86 |
The Concept and Types of ProfitMaking The Role of Capital | 90 |
Calculations in Kind | 100 |
Substantive Conditions of Formal Rationality in a Money Economy | 107 |
3 | 108 |
Market Economies and Planned Economies | 109 |
Chapter XV | 112 |
Types of Economic Division of Labor | 114 |
Types of the Technical Division of Labor | 118 |
Types of the Technical Division of LaborContinued | 120 |
Social Aspects of the Division of Labor | 122 |
Social Aspects of the Division of LaborContinued | 125 |
The Appropriation of the Material Means of Production | 130 |
The Appropriation of Managerial Functions | 136 |
The Expropriation of Workers from the Means of Production | 137 |
The Expropriation of Workers from the Means of Production Continued | 139 |
The Concept of Occupation and Types of Occupational Structure | 140 |
24a The Principal Forms of Appropriation and of Market Relationship | 144 |
Conditions Underlying the Calculability of the Productivity of Labor | 150 |
Restricted Money | 174 |
Note Money | 176 |
The Formal and Substantive Validity of Money | 178 |
Methods and Aims of Monetary Policy | 180 |
A Critical Note on the State Theory of Money | 184 |
The NonMonetary Significance of Political Bodies for the Economic Order | 193 |
The Financing of Political Bodies | 194 |
Repercussions of Public Financing on Private Economic Activity | 199 |
The Influence of Economic Factors on the Formation of Organizations | 201 |
The Mainspring of Economic Activity | 202 |
Notes | 206 |
Chapter III | 212 |
LEGAL AUTHORITY WITH A BUREAUCRATIC ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF | 217 |
POLITICAL AND HIEROCRATIC DOMINATION | 218 |
The Pure TypeContinued | 220 |
Monocratic Bureaucracy | 223 |
The Pure TypeContinued | 228 |
Benefices and Fiefs | 235 |
Types of Patrimonial Codification 856 | 236 |
THE ROUTINIZATION OF CHARISMA | 246 |
FEUDALISM STÄNDESTAAT AND PATRIMONIALISM 1 The Nature of Fiefs and Types of Feudal Relationships 1070 | 248 |
The Military Origin of Feudalism 1077 | 254 |
FEUDALISM | 255 |
INDEX | 258 |
Combinations of the Different Types of Authority | 262 |
COLLEGIALITY AND THE DIVISION OF POWERS | 271 |
The Functionally Specific Division of Powers | 282 |
DIRECT DEMOCRACY AND REPRESENTATIVE ADMINISTRATION | 289 |
Representation by the Agents of Interest Groups | 297 |
THE ECONOMY AND THE ARENA | 309 |
The Economic Relationships of Organized Groups | 339 |
The Concentration of the Means of Administration 980 | 351 |
Household Neighborhood and Kin Group | 356 |
Household Enterprise and Oikos | 370 |
The Rise of the Calculative | 375 |
The Oikos | 381 |
Theoretical Ambiguities | 387 |
Nationality and Cultural Prestige | 395 |
Canonical Writings Dogmas and Scriptural Religion | 457 |
Preaching and Pastoral Care as Results of Prophetic Religion | 464 |
THE FORMAL QUALITIES OF REVOLUTIONARY LAW | 469 |
Aristocratic Irreligion versus Warring for the Faith | 472 |
The French Civil Code 865 | 480 |
THE RELIGION OF NONPRIVILEGED STRATA | 481 |
The Religious Equality of Women Among Disprivileged Strata | 488 |
The Indeterminate Economic Consequences of Bureaucratization 989 | 501 |
HighStatus Intellectuals as Religious Innovators | 502 |
The Intellectualism of Higher and LowerRanking Strata in Ancient | 508 |
Modern Intellectual Status Groups and Secular Salvation Ideologies | 515 |
Predestination and Providence | 522 |
Notes | 529 |
Salvation Through Good Works | 532 |
The Certainty of Grace and the Religious Virtuosi | 538 |
Mysticism versus Asceticism | 544 |
The Decisive Differences Between Oriental and Occidental Salvation | 551 |
The Governments Failure to Curb Harmful Monarchic | 552 |
SOTERIOLOGY OR SALVATION FROM OUTSIDE | 557 |
Salvation Through Faith Alone and Its AntiIntellectual Consequences | 563 |
Salvation Through Belief in Predestination | 572 |
Familial Piety Neighborly Help and Compensation | 579 |
POLITICS | 590 |
Natural Law and Vocational Ethics | 597 |
The Religious Status of Marriage and of Women | 604 |
THE GREAT RELIGIONS AND THE WORLD | 611 |
The ThisWorldliness of Islam and Its Economic Ethics | 623 |
Jesus Indifference Toward the World | 630 |
Sect Church and Democracy 1204 | 634 |
Its Impersonality and Ethic Fragment | 635 |
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