Social Science Quotations: Who Said What, When, and WhereSocial Science Quotations has been prepared to meet an evident, unmet need in the literature of the social sciences. Writings on the lives and theories of individual social scientists abound, but there has been no fully documented collection of memorable quotations from the social sciences as a whole. The frequent use of quotations in scientific as well as literary writings that are mere summaries or paraphrases typically fail to capture the full force of formulations that have made quotations memorable. This book of quotations invites the further reading or rereading of the original texts, beyond the quotations themselves. Sills and Merton draw extensively upon the writings that constitute the historical core of the social sciences and social thought; those works with staying power often described as the "classical texts." Many quotations have been drawn from these classical texts because the quotations contain memorable ideas memorably expressed. Both consequential and memorable, these words have been quoted over the generations, entering into the collective memory of social scientists everywhere and at times diffusing into popular thought and into the vernacular as well. This book is useful to social scientists, anthropologists, economists, historians, political scientists, psychiatrists, psychologists, sociologists and statisticians, and for all who want to learn or verify memorable formulations and phrases concerning social thought and social theories. It is particularly useful for graduate students taking courses that examine the history of their discipline. |
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This proves to be a nineteenth-century echo of Lucian's second-century precept that “the historian's one task is to tell the thing as it happened.” This historiographic theme has been commented upon endlessly. Thus, Charles A. Beard's ...
4 Three things are required for any war to be just. The first is the authority of the sovereign on whose ... The balance of justice is upset if either the price exceeds the value of the goods in question or the thing exceeds the price.
New Organon (1620) 1960: Book 1, aphorism 104, 5 The human understanding when it has once adopted an opinion (either as being the received opinion or as being agreeable to itself) draws all things else to support and agree with it.
6 [Boas] found anthropology a collection of wild guesses and a happy hunting ground for the romantic lover of primitive things; he left it a discipline in which theories could ...
1654-1705 Swiss mathematician i We define the art of conjecture, or stochastic art, as the art of evaluating as exactly as possible the probabilities of things, so that in our judgments and actions we can always base ourselves on what ...
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Macmillan book of social science quotations
Izvješće korisnika/ca - Not Available - Book Verdict"What to leave in; what to leave out. That is the question.'' With quotations, this is especially the issue, as compilers grapple with the fundamental user question: "How will this be of any use to me ... Pročitajte cijelu recenziju
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Social Science Quotations: Who Said What, When, and Where David L. Sills,Robert King Merton Ograničeni pregled - 2000 |