Applied Sociology: A Treatise on the Conscious Improvement of Society by SocietyGinn, 1906 - 384 pages This work and its predecessor, Pure Sociology, constitute together a system of sociology, and these, with Dynamic Sociology, The Psychic Factors of Civilization, and the Outlines of Sociology, make up a more comprehensive system of social philosophy. Should any reader acquaint himself with the whole, he will find it not only consistent with itself, but progressive in the sense that each successive volume carries the subject a step farther with a minimum of repetition or duplicate treatment. The central thought is that of a true science of society, capable, in the measure that it approaches completeness, of being turned to the profit of mankind. If there is one respect in which it differs more than in others from rival systems of philosophy it is in its practical character of never losing sight of the end or purpose, nor of the possibilities of conscious effort. It is a reaction against the philosophy of despair that has come to dominate even the most enlightened scientific thought. It aims to point out a remedy for the general paralysis that is creeping over the world, and which a too narrow conception of the law of cosmic evolution serves rather to increase than to diminish. It proclaims the efficacy of effort, provided it is guided by intelligence. It would remove the embargo laid upon human activity by a false interpretation of scientific determinism, and, without having recourse to the equally false conception of a power to will, it insists upon the power to act. - Preface. |
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Page xi
... equal in all races . - -- - - - - - - • 156 The Religious Environment . — Effect of different religions on the pro- duction of great men . Christianity and Judaism . - Catholicism and Protestantism . Effect of religious persecution ...
... equal in all races . - -- - - - - - - • 156 The Religious Environment . — Effect of different religions on the pro- duction of great men . Christianity and Judaism . - Catholicism and Protestantism . Effect of religious persecution ...
Page xiv
... equal opportunity usually from the economic standpoint . — Views of Sumner , Topinard , Gunton , Kidd . The economic end . - Haste to deal with ends to the neglect of means . - Ends attainable only through means . - The series of means ...
... equal opportunity usually from the economic standpoint . — Views of Sumner , Topinard , Gunton , Kidd . The economic end . - Haste to deal with ends to the neglect of means . - Ends attainable only through means . - The series of means ...
Page xv
... Equal opportunities would secure this . Consumption of intellectual as of material products yields satis- faction . Increased satisfaction is improvement . This would bring about the reconciliation of achievement with improvement ...
... Equal opportunities would secure this . Consumption of intellectual as of material products yields satis- faction . Increased satisfaction is improvement . This would bring about the reconciliation of achievement with improvement ...
Page xvi
... equals of the higher classes . · Criminals are the geniuses of the slums . Difference wholly in the environment . — Irra- tional methods employed . - Slums unnecessary . - Wild men , like wild animals , must be tamed while young . - The ...
... equals of the higher classes . · Criminals are the geniuses of the slums . Difference wholly in the environment . — Irra- tional methods employed . - Slums unnecessary . - Wild men , like wild animals , must be tamed while young . - The ...
Page 7
... equal . Nor is this in the Jeffersonian sense precisely , though it is a sense akin to that , viz . , that , whatever may be the differences in their faculties , all men have an equal right to the exercise and enjoyment of the faculties ...
... equal . Nor is this in the Jeffersonian sense precisely , though it is a sense akin to that , viz . , that , whatever may be the differences in their faculties , all men have an equal right to the exercise and enjoyment of the faculties ...
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action animals applied sociology Ariège Basses-Pyrénées belief belong born Bouches-du-Rhône Candolle cause cent chiefly cities civilization Comte constitute Côte-d'Or density departments doctrine Dynamic Sociology economic edition effect environment equal error ethics existence fact factor faculties false favorable fecundity Finistère forces France French furnished Galton Haute-Garonne Haute-Loire Hautes-Alpes Hautes-Pyrénées Herbert Spencer Hereditary Genius heredity ideas individual Indre-et-Loire influence intellectual intelligence John Stuart Mill knowledge labor least less letters logic Loiret London Lozère Maine-et-Loire mankind means ment MERIT TALENT method mind moral Morbihan nature never Odin Odin's opportunity Paris Pas-de-Calais persons phenomena philosophy political population position possess practically present primitive principle production progress Pure Sociology question Quoted race reason relative religious result savage says scarcely scientific sense social society Spencer spirit statistics supposed theory things tion true truth wholly world view