The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of "ordering-and-forbidding" — that is, meeting a crisis by an arbitrary act of will decreeing the disappearance of the undesirable or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and using... Politics and Science - Página 71por William Esslinger - 1955 - 167 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Albion W. Small, Ellsworth Faris, Ernest Watson Burgess, Herbert Blumer - 1922 - 874 páginas
...men to it was that, like Christian Science, it frequently worked. . The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of "orderingand-forbidding"...or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This method corresponds exactly to the magical... | |
| American Sociological Association - 1923 - 520 páginas
...Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (Boston, 1918), I, 3: "The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of 'ordering-and-forbidding'...or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This method corresponds exactly to the magical... | |
| 1924 - 260 páginas
...3: "The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of 1ordering-and-forbidding' — that is, meeting a crisis by an arbitrary act of will...or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This method corresponds exactly to the magical... | |
| William Isaac Thomas, Florian Znaniecki - 1927 - 1144 páginas
...stages of human thought passed hundreds or even thousands of years ago. The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of "ordering-and-forbidding"...exactly to the magical phase of natural technique. In both, the essential means of bringing a determined effect is more or less consciously thought to... | |
| William Isaac Thomas, Florian Znaniecki - 1927 - 1148 páginas
...ago. The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of "orderlHg^and-forbidding''-— that is, meeting a crisis by an arbitrary act of will...exactly to the magical phase of natural technique. In both, the essential means of bringing a determined effect is more or less consciously thought to... | |
| Robert E. Park, Ernest W. Burgess, Roderick Duncan McKenzie - 1967 - 250 páginas
...Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (Boston, 1918), I, 3: "The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of 'ordering-and-forbidding'...or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This method corresponds exactly to the magical... | |
| Robert E. Park, Ernest W. Burgess, Roderick Duncan McKenzie - 1967 - 250 páginas
...3: "The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that of 'ordcring-and-forbidding' — that is, meeting a crisis by an arbitrary act of will...or the appearance of the desirable phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This method corresponds exactly to the magical... | |
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