| Pierre Bourdieu - 1977 - 260 páginas
...analogy between energy and power which could serve as the basis for a unification of social science: "Like energy, power has many forms, such as wealth, armaments, civil authority, influence or opinion. No one of these can be regarded as subordinate to any other, and there is no one form from... | |
| Pierre Bourdieu - 1990 - 348 páginas
...analogy between energy and power which could serve as the basis for a unification of social science: 'Like energy, power has many forms, such as wealth, armaments, civil authority, influence or opinion. No one of these can be regarded as subordinate to any other, and there is no one form from... | |
| Alan L. Mackay - 1991 - 312 páginas
...of Symbolic Logic itself. Principle* of Mathematics 1903 (New York: Cambridge University Pres*) 60 The fundamental concept in social science is Power,...which Energy is the fundamental concept in physics. Power: A New Social Analyiu 1938 (New York: Norton) 61 With equal passion I have sought knowledge.... | |
| Seth Kreisberg - 1992 - 290 páginas
...concerning power. 1 Bertrand Russell (1938) asserts that "the fundamental concept in social sciences is Power, in the same sense in which energy is the fundamental concept in physics" (p. 12). While Russell's argument for the primacy of power in explaining and understanding human interaction... | |
| Martin Buber - 1992 - 273 páginas
...calls it a "new social analysis" — power is defined as "the fundamental concept in social science, in the same sense in which energy is the fundamental concept in physics. " This bold concept on the part of a distinguished logician, which reminds us of Nietzsche's doctrine... | |
| Nicholas B. Dirks, Geoff Eley, Sherry B. Ortner - 1994 - 646 páginas
...analogy between energy and power which could serve as the basis for a unification of social science: "Like energy, power has many forms, such as wealth, armaments, civil authority, influence, or opinion. No one of these can be regarded as subordinate to any other, and there is no one form which... | |
| Mark Blasius - 1994 - 264 páginas
...follow that of Bertrand Russell, claiming that power is "the fundamental concept in social science ... in the same sense in which Energy is the fundamental concept in physics."2 Here, the study of power is the master science in examining human reality. No matter whether... | |
| Peter Michael Appelbaum - 1995 - 328 páginas
...much earlier by Bertrand Russell, who claimed power as "the fundamental concept in social science ... in the same sense in which energy is the fundamental concept in physics." See Russell's Power: A New Social Analysis (New York: Norton, 1938). 54. This paragraph is taken from... | |
| Severine Mushambampale Rugumamu - 1997 - 336 páginas
...Russell (1938: 12) had the courage to forcefully claim that the "fundamental concept in social sciences is power, in the same sense in which energy is the fundamental concept in physics." In fact, power is not only one of the major explanatory concepts in the social sciences but it is also... | |
| Alan D. Schrift, Patrick Murray - 1997 - 356 páginas
...analogy between energy and power which could serve as the basis for a unification of social science: "Like energy, power has many forms, such as wealth, armaments, civil authority, influence or opinion. No one of these can be regarded as subordinate to any other, and there is no one form from... | |
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