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Durkheim's philosophy lectures: notes from the Lycâee de Sens course, 1883-1884

Durkheim, EmileJoas, Hans(Foreword by)Gross, Neil(Edited and translated by)Jones, Robert Alun(Edited and translated by)
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Moving back and forth between the history of philosophy and the contributions of philosophers in his own day, Durkheim takes up topics as diverse as philosophical psychology, logic, ethics, and metaphysics, and seeks to articulate a unified philosophical position.

Remarkably, in these lectures, given more than a decade before the publication of his groundbreaking book, The Division of Labour in Society (1893), the 'social realism' that is so characteristic of his later work - where he insists, famously, that social facts cannot be reduced to psychological or economic ones, and that such facts constrain human action in important ways - is totally absent in these early lectures.

For this reason, they will be of special interest to students of the history of the social sciences, for they shed important light on the course of Durkheim's intellectual development.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107142490 / 9781107142497
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
300.1
19/07/2004
England
English
333 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%