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Charisma and Disenchantment: The Vocation Lectures

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Author:

Max Weber

Number Of Downloads:

105

Number Of Reads:

10

Language:

English

File Size:

2.55 MB

Category:

Essays

Pages:

143

Quality:

good

Views:

1779

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Book Description

German sociologist Max Weber is considered one of the most adventurous, motivating, and influential theorists of the modern state. Among his most important works are the so-called Preaching Lectures, which were published shortly after the end of the First World War and presented at the invitation of a group of student activists. The question the students asked Weber to address was simple and troubling: In a modern world marked by division of labor, economic expansion, and unrelenting change, can an academic or political career still be considered a true calling? In response, Weber gave his famous diagnosis of "disappointment in the world," along with a difficult description of the place of morality in the classroom and in research. In his second lecture, he introduced the concept of political charisma, giving it a central role in the modern state, even as he realized that politics is more than anything else "a slow and hard digging of holes in the hardboards". Damion Searls' new translation highlights the strengths and differences of these famous lectures. An introduction by Paul Ritter and Chad Wilmon describes their historical and biographical background, reception, and influence. Weber's efforts to rethink the idea of ​​public advocacy at the turbulent start of the twentieth century were revealed more timely and agitating than ever before.
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Max Weber

Maximilian Karl Emil Weber (April 21, 1864 - June 14, 1920) was a German economist and political scientist, one of the founders of modern sociology and the study of public administration in state institutions, who came up with the definition of bureaucracy, and his most famous work is the book The Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism as This is his most important founding work in religious sociology, in which he pointed out that religion is a non-exclusive factor in the development of culture in Western and Eastern societies, and in his famous work, “Politics as a Profession,” he defined the state: as the entity that monopolizes the legitimate use of natural force, and this definition became pivotal in Study politics. Weber studied all religions and was of the opinion that Protestant morals are ideal morals, from which he drew the ideal model of bureaucracy, and my father is characterized by rationality and rationality, but its application in reality is difficult, and if applied in the organization, it would reach the highest levels of rationality.

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