Chapter 1 Introduction, Wolfgang J. Mommsen; Part 1 Max Weber and the Social Sciences at the Turn of the Century; Chapter 2 A Science of Man: Max Weber and the Political Economy of the German Historical School, Wilhelm Hennis; Chapter 3 Gustav Schmoller and Max Weber, Manfred Schön; Chapter 4 Max Weber and the Younger Generation in the Verein für Sozialpolitik, Dieter Krüger; Chapter 5 Max and Alfred Weber and the Verein für Sozialpolitik, Eberhard Demm; Chapter 6 Personal Conflict and Ideological Options in Sombart and Weber, Arthur Mitzman; Chapter 7 Varieties of Social Economics: Joseph A. Schumpeter and Max Weber, Jürgen Osterhammel; Chapter 8 Robert Michels and Max Weber: Moral Conviction Versus the Politics of Responsibility, Wolfgang J. Mommsen; Chapter 9 Mosca, Pareto and Weber: A Historical Comparison, David Beetham; Chapter 10 Georges Sorel and Max Weber, J. G. Merquior; Chapter 11 Mill and Weber on History, Freedom and Reason, Alan Ryan; Chapter 12 Weber and Durkheim: Coincidence and Divergence, Anthony Giddens; Part 2 Max Weber’s Relation to the Theologians and Historians; Chapter 13 Max Weber and the Evangelical-Social Congress, Rita Aldenhoff; Chapter 14 Max Weber and the Lutherans, W. R. Ward; Chapter 15 Friendship Between Experts: Notes on Weber and Troeltsch, Friedrich Wilhelm Graf; Chapter 16 Max Weber and Eduard Meyer, Friedrich H. Tenbruck; Chapter 17 Karl Lamprecht and Max Weber: Historical Sociology within the Confines of a Historians’ Controversy, Sam Whimster; Chapter 18 Otto Hintze and Max Weber: Attempts at a Comparison, Jürgen Kocka; Part 3 The Realm of Politics; Chapter 19 Friedrich Naumann and Max Weber: Aspects of a Political Part nership, Peter Theiner; Chapter 20 Max Weber and Walther Rathenau, Ernst Schulin; Chapter 21 Gustav Stresemann and Max Weber: Politics and Scholarship, Gangolf Hübinger; Chapter 22 Dietrich Schäfer and Max Weber, Roger Chickering; Chapter 23 Eduard Bernstein and Max Weber, John Breuilly; Chapter 24 Max Weber, Karl Kautsky and German Social Democracy, Dick Geary; Chapter 25 Max Weber’s Relation to Anarchism and Anarchists: The Case of Ernst Toller, Dittmar Dahlmann; Chapter 26 Max Weber and Antonio Gramsci, Carl Levy, James Joll; Part 4 Max Weber and Philosophical Thought; Chapter 27 Weber and Nietzsche: Questioning the Liberation of Social Science from Historicism, Robert Eden; Chapter 28 The Ambiguity of Modernity: Georg Simmel and Max Weber, David Frisby; Chapter 29 Weber and the Southwest German School: The Genesis of the Concept of the Historical Individual, Guy Oakes; Chapter 30 Max Weber and Benedetto Croce, Pietro Rossi; Chapter 31 Weber and Freud: Vocation and Self-Acknowledgement, Tracy B. Strong; Chapter 32 Passion as a Mode of Life: Max Weber, the Otto Gross Circle and Eroticism, Wolfgang Schwentker; Chapter 33 Ernst Bloch and Georg Lukács in Max Weber’s Heidelberg, Eva Karádi; Chapter 34 Max Weber, Oswald Spengler, and a Biographical Surmise, Douglas Webster; Chapter 35 Karl Jaspers: Thinking with Max Weber in Mind, Dieter Henrich; Part 5 Max Weber: the Enduring Contemporary; Chapter 36 Max Weber and the World Since 1920, Edward Shils; Chapter 37 Max Weber and Modern Social Science, Ralf Dahrendorf;
Wolfgang J. Mommsen, Jürgen Osterhammel
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |