The Antinomies of Classical Thought: Marx and Durkheim (Theoretical Logic in Sociology)/
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Central Library, Sikkim University | Not for loan | E-29 |
Chapter 1|8 pages
Prolegomena. General Theoretical Argument as Interpretation: The Critical Role of “Readings”
Part One Collective Order and the Ambiguity about Action
Chapter 2|30 pages
Marx’s First Phase (1): From Moral Criticism to External Necessity
Chapter 3|34 pages
Marx’s First Phase (2): The Attack on Moral Criticism and the Origins of a Historical Materialism
Chapter 4|44 pages
Durkheim’s First Phase (1): The Ambiguous Transition from Voluntary Morality to Morality as External Constraint
Chapter 5|42 pages
Durkheim’s First Phase (2): The Division of Labor in Society as the Attempt to Reconcile Instrumental Order with Freedom
Part Two Two Different Paths to Collective Order
Chapter 6|48 pages
Marx’s Later Writings: The Elegant Apotheosis of Instrumental Control
Chapter 7|48 pages
Durkheim’s Later Writings (1): The Transition to Morality as a Spiritual Force
Chapter 8|38 pages
Durkheim’s Later Writings (2): The Religious Model and the Idealist Theory of Society
Part Three One-Dimensional Theory and Its Discontents
Chapter 9|29 pages
Equivocation and Revision in the Classical Theory of Sociological Idealism: Durkheim and “Durkheimianism”
Chapter 10|43 pages
Equivocation and Revision in the Classical Theory of Sociological Materialism: Marx and “Marxism”
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