MAX WEBER (1864-1920) by Dr. Frank Elwell.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 1 Principles of Government
Advertisements

Political Culture and Socialization (System Level)
Political Culture and Political Socialization
Social Theory of Max Weber Spring RATIONAL NONRATIONAL COLLECTIVE INDIVIDUAL Alienation  commodity fetishism Marx surplus value  class conflict.
Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations
Kant’s Ethical Theory.
Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach 7/e
The Sociology of Max Weber
Chapter 4 Social Structure
POLITICAL CULTURE Fundamental Values, Sentiments, & Knowledge.
1 Max Weber Rationality and Organization.
Primary and Secondary Groups
Public Budget As Decision- Making Process  Decision - Making Models:  Incremental Change Model  Satisfying Model  Ideal Rational Model  Stages of.
Max Weber and the Bureaucratisation of Early Childhood
MAX WEBER ( ) by Dr. Frank Elwell.
Max Weber ( ) studied the characteristics of modern life
PEOPLE WHO INTERACT IN A DEFINED TERRITORY AND SHARE CULTURE
PEOPLE WHO INTERACT IN A DEFINED TERRITORY AND SHARE CULTURE
SOC Lecture 5 Max Weber. Some limits of Marxist historical sociology: -subjective meaning of action -cultural context of meaning Emphasis on structural.
Business, Ethics and Profit: Economic Approaches Marc Le Menestrel
Basic Concepts of Democracy
This Week The three “perspectives” of Sociology Alienation as an example of theory.
Max Weber ( ).
Key Figures Wrap-up!. Emile Durkheim ( )
Public Administration Jay Shaftitz & E. W. Russell
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 5: Groups and Organizations. Objectives (slide 1 of 2) 5.1 Types of Social Groups Define what a social group is and describe types of groups.
Chapter 6 Groups and Societies
SOCIAL INTERACTION & GROUPS, ORGANIZATIONS, BEAURACRACIES.
Politics under a sociology microscope concerns social interactions among individuals and groups and their impact on the larger political and economic order.
Max Weber Katie Geneser Hayden George. Background Born 1864, Thuringia Father was wealthy civil servant who was highly involved in both politics.
Public Policy First Lecture. Policy studies take elements from many disciplines: Political science: emphasis on the process by which policy decisions.
Social Groups and Organizations Chapter 6. Learning Objectives  Distinguish between primary and secondary groups.  Explain the functions of groups.
Types of Social Interaction
Max Weber April 22, June 14, Marianne and Max Weber Some of the books by Max Weber The Protestant Ethic & the Spirit of Capitalism The Religion.
Groups & Organizations Chapter 6. Groups  Social group: collection of people who interact frequently, share a sense of belonging, and have a feeling.
Lecture 4 Political power and democracy. Democracy: A Social Power Analysis Democracy: A Social Power Analysis Democracy and freedom are the central values.
Authority Bureaucracy.  They (Jesus, a professor or a scientists, a Queen or King, slave traders) are leaders in the sense that they issue commands.
Sociology, Eleventh Edition SOCIETY PEOPLE WHO INTERACT IN A DEFINED TERRITORY AND SHARE CULTURE.
Q1. The politically relevant opinions held by ordinary citizens that they express openly.
HUMAN SOCIETIES. SOCIETY PEOPLE WHO INTERACT WITHIN A DEFINED TERRITORY WHILE SHARING A COMMON CULTURE OR WAY OF LIFE.
1-Muhammad Usman Ali Adnan Khalid Shakeel Anjum Khuram Shahzad
Sociocultural Evolution By Dr. Frank Elwell. Sociocultural Evolution Sociocultural materialism is an avowedly evolutionary perspective.
Organizational Dynamics
Social Status and Roles Review Status: a socially defined position within a group or society Role: the behavior (actions) expected of a person who holds.
Stratification and Inequality Part 3. how you see it…
Organizational Behaviour What is an organization? Is a group of individuals working together to achieve common goals and structured into a division of.
6.4 Formal Organizations. The Nature of Formal Organizations Deliberately created to achieve one or more long-term goals Deliberately created to achieve.
“Bureaucracy” (1925) Excerpts from Max Weber’s Economy and Society 1.
Part II.  In addition to sociology he studied economics, law, philosophy and comparative history.  Development of modern capitalism  How modern society.
Foundations of American Government. The Functions of Government  Government is an institution in which leaders use power to make and enforce laws. 
Formal Organizations Unit 3: Socialization. Formal Organizations  We spend most of our lives interacting with secondary groups  Formal organization.
1 The Subject Is Organizations I. What is a Formal Organization? Special type of secondary group designated to allow a relatively large number of people.
1. Max Weber and the Theory of Bureaucracy The term bureaucracy was coined by German sociologist Max Weber. Bureaucracy refers to complex organizations.
Sociological Theory Say Something!. Say Something Read the information on the slide…whether it’s a picture or written word Say Something about what you.
SOCIOLOGY A Down-to-Earth Approach 8/e SOCIOLOGY Chapter Seven: Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
BureaucracIEs and formal OrganIZatIons
BUREAUCRACY AND POWER: WEBER AND MICHELS
Social Interaction & Social Structure
PEOPLE WHO INTERACT IN A DEFINED TERRITORY AND SHARE CULTURE
Essential Features of a State
BureaucracIEs and formal OrganIZatIons
Module 19: Understanding Organizations
Sociological Theories
Principals of Bureaucracy
Aim … Students will be able to Understand:
The Evolution of Management Thinking
HUMAN SOCIETIES 1.
WHAT IS MANAGEMENT ? MANAGEMNT IS ART & SCIENCE OF PROCURING, CONTROLLING & UTILIZING ALL FINANCIAL & NON-FINANCIAL RESOURCES FOR ACHIVING.
Ch. 5: Social Interaction, Groups & Social Structure
Presentation transcript:

MAX WEBER (1864-1920) by Dr. Frank Elwell

NOTE: This presentation is based on the theories of Max Weber as presented in his books listed in the bibliography. A complete summary of Weber’s theories (as well as the theories of other macro-theorists) can be found in Macrosociology: The Study of Sociocultural Systems, by Frank W. Elwell. If you would like to receive a .pdf file of the chapter on Weber please write me at felwell@rsu.edu and put Weber.pdf in the subject line.

SOCIAL ACTION MAX WEBER CONCEIVED OF SOCIOLOGY AS A COMPREHENSIVE SCIENCE OF SOCIAL ACTION. HE SAID THERE ARE FOUR TYPES: ZWECKRATIONAL WERTRATIONAL AFFECTIVE TRADITIONAL

ZWECKRATIONAL GOAL ORIENTED RATIONAL BEHAVIOR. ACTION IN WHICH BOTH THE GOAL AND THE MEANS ARE RATIONALLY CHOSEN. YOU HAVE A GOAL,YOU TAKE RATIONAL STEPS TO ACHIEVE IT. ANOTHER NAME FOR THIS IS “TECHNOCRATIC THINKING.”

WERTRATIONAL VALUE-ORIENTED RATIONALITY IS CHARACTERIZED BY STRIVING FOR A GOAL, WHICH IN ITSELF MAY NOT BE RATIONAL, BUT WHICH IS NONETHELESS PURSUED THROUGH RATIONAL MEANS.

AFFECTIVE ACTION THAT IS ANCHORED IN THE EMOTIONAL STATE OF THE ACTOR RATHER THAN IN THE RATIONAL WEIGHING OF MEANS AND ENDS.

TRADITIONAL ACTION GUIDED BY CUSTOMARY HABITS OF THOUGHT, BY RELIANCE ON THE "ETERNAL YESTERDAY."

SOCIAL ACTION WEBER WAS PRIMARILY CONCERNED WITH MODERN WESTERN SOCIETY, IN WHICH, AS HE SAW IT, BEHAVIOR HAD COME TO BE DOMINATED INCREASINGLY BY GOAL-ORIENTED RATIONALITY.

SOCIAL ACTION IN MODERN SOCIETY THE EFFICIENT APPLICATION OF MEANS TO ENDS HAS BECOME PREDOMINANT AND HAS REPLACED OTHER SPRINGS OF SOCIAL ACTION.

SOCIAL ACTION WEBER PROPOSED THAT THE BASIC DISTINGUISHING MARKS OF MODERN WESTERN MAN WERE BEST VIEWED IN TERMS OF CHARACTERISTIC SHIFTS IN HUMAN ACTION.

THE IDEAL TYPE AN IDEAL TYPE IS AN ANALYTICAL CONSTRUCT THAT SERVES THE SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR AS A MEASURING ROD TO ASCERTAIN THE SIMILARITIES AS WELL AS DEVIATIONS IN CONCRETE CASES.

THE IDEAL TYPE THE IDEAL TYPE INVOLVES AN ACCENTUATION OF THE "LOGICALLY CONSISTENT" INSTITUTION. IT IS A LOGICALLY PRECISE AND COHERNET WHOLE, THAT CAN NEVER BE FOUND AS SUCH IN REALITY.

IDEAL CAPITALISM PRIVATE OWNERSHIP OF ALL POTENTIALLY PROFITABLE ACTIVITIES INDIVIDUAL ACTORS SEEKING TO MAXIMIZE THEIR PROFIT COMPETITION BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS AND FIRMS GOVERNMENT KEEPS ITS HANDS OUT OF THE MARKETPLACE, OR LAISSEZ FAIRE

BUREAUCRACY BUREAUCRATIC COORDINATION OF HUMAN ACTIONS IS THE DISTINCTIVE MARK OF MODERN SOCIAL STRUCTURE.

IDEAL BUREAUCRACY HIERARCHY IMPERSONALITY WRITTEN RULES OF CONDUCT ACHIEVEMENT SPECIALIZED DIVISION OF LABOR EFFICIENCY

TYPES OF AUTHORITY: RATIONAL-LEGAL TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY CHARISMATIC

CAUSALITY WEBER FIRMLY BELIEVED IN SOCIOLOGICAL CAUSALITY, BUT HE EXPRESSED CAUSALITY IN TERMS OF PROBABILITY.

CAUSALITY "WE ASSOCIATE THE HIGHEST MEASURE OF AN EMPIRICAL 'FEELING OF FREEDOM' WITH THOSE ACTIONS WHICH WE ARE CONSCIOUS OF PERFORMING RATIONALLY."

CAUSALITY PREDICTION BECOMES POSSIBLE ONLY WITHIN A SYSTEM OF CONCEPTUALIZATIONS THAT EXCLUDES CONCERN FOR MANY CONCRETE FACTS.

CAUSALITY WEBER ARGUED THAT MARX HAD PRESENTED AN OVERLY SIMPLIFIED SCHEME THAT COULD NOT ADEQUATLY TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE COMLEX WEB OF CAUSATION LINKING SOCIAL STRUCTURES AND IDEAS.

IDEALISM-MATERIALISM THERE IS NO PRE-ESTABLISHED LINKAGE BETWEEN THE CONTENT OF AN IDEA AND THE MATERIAL INTERESTS OF THOSE WHO BECOME ITS CHAMPION, BUT AN "ELECTIVE AFFINITY" MAY ARISE BETWEEN THE TWO.

IDEALISM-MATERIALISM WEBER ATTEMPTED TO SHOW THAT THE RELATIONS BETWEEN IDEAS AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES WERE MULTIPLE AND VARIED, AND THAT CAUSAL CONNECTION WENT IN BOTH DIRECTIONS. HE GAVE GREATER WEIGHT TO THE INFLUENCE AND INTERACTION OF IDEAS AND VALUES ON SOCIO-CULTURAL EVOLUTION.

PROTESTANT ETHIC THE PROBLEMS POSED BY MODERN SOCIETY WERE FOREMOST IN WEBER'S MIND, AND IN THIS CONNECTION HE CONCEIVED THE SHIFT FROM TRADITIONAL TO RATIONAL ACTION. HE MAINTAINED THAT THE RATIONALIZATION OF ACTION CAN ONLY BE REALIZED WHEN TRADITIONAL WAYS OF LIFE ARE ABANDONED.

PROTESTANT ETHIC THE PROTESTANT ETHIC BROKE THE HOLD OF TRADITION WHILE IT ENCOURAGED MEN TO APPLY THEMSELVES RATIONALLY TO THEIR WORK. WHILE WBER MAINTAINED THAT THERE WERE SEVERAL MATERIAL CAUSES TO THE RISE OF CAPITALISM, IDEAS AND IDEOLOGIES PLAYED A ROLE.

BUREAUCRACY: DYSFUNCTIONS WEBER WAS VERY CONCERNED ABOUT THE IMPACT THAT BUREAUCRATIZATION HAD ON HUMAN CULTURE. HE NOTED SEVERAL DYSFUNCTIONS: OLIGARCHY RATIONALITY DEHUMANIZATION IRRATIONALITY FACTOR

OLIGARCHY BY ITS VERY NATURE BUREAUCRACY GENERATES AN ENORMOUS DEGREE OF UNREGULATED AND OFTEN UNPERCEIVED SOCIAL POWER. BUREAUCRACY TENDS TO RESULT IN OLIGRACHY, OR RULE BY THE FEW—BY OFFICIALS AT THE TOP OF THE ORGANIZATION.

OLIGARCHY THE IRON LAW OF OLIGARCHY: "WHO SAYS ORGANIZATION, SAYS OLIGARCHY.” ACCORDING TO THE "IRON LAW,” DEMOCRACY AND LARGE SCALE ORGANIZATION ARE INCOMPATIBLE. THIS IS DUE TO THE VERY NATURE OF BUREAUCRATIC ORGANIZATION WHICH IS HIERARCHICALLY ORGANIZED WITH TREMENDOUS POWER INVESTED IN THE TOP OFFICES.

OLIGARCHY THESE ORGANIZATIONAL CHARACTERISICS ARE REINFORCED BY THE CHARACTERISTICS OF MEMBERS OF THE ORGANIZATION. LEADERS HAVE ACCESS AND CONTROL OVER INFORMATION AND FACILITIES THAT ARE NOT AVAILABLE TO THE RANK-AND-FILE. THESE LEADERS TEND TO PROMOTE JUNIOR OFFICIALS WHO SHARE THEIR OPINIONS.

OLIGARCHY THE RANK AND FILE ALSO PROMOTE OLIGARCHY. THEY TEND TO LOOK TO LEADERS FOR POLICY DIRECTIVES, AND ARE GENERALLY PREPARED TO ALLOW THE LEADERS TO EXERCISE THEIR JUDGEMENT ON MOST MATTERS.

OLIGARCHY WEBER POINTED OUT THAT THE TREND TOWARD GREATER LIBERTY IN MODERN SOCIETIES REQUIRES BUREAUCRATIZATION OF SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS.

OLIGARCHY MODERN DEMOCRACY, THROUGH THE VOTE, HAS A CERTAIN INFLUENCE OVER THE ELITES WHO WILL RULE THEM, BUT THERE CANNOT BE FULL PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY.

OLIGARCHY THOSE ON TOP OF BUREAUCRATIC HIERARCHIES CAN COMMAND VAST RESOURCES IN PURSUIT OF THEIR INTERESTS. THIS GIVES THE ELITE AT THE TOP OF THESE HIERARCHIES VAST POWER.

OLIGARCHY "THE MOST PERVASIVE FEATURE THAT DISTINGUISHES CONTEMPORARY LIFE IS THAT IT IS DOMINATED BY LARGE, COMPLEX, AND FORMAL ORGANIZATIONS...

OLIGARCHY "OUR ABILITY TO ORGANIZE THOUSANDS AND EVEN MILLIONS OF MEN IN ORDER TO ACCOMPLISH LARGE-SCALE TASKS--BE THEY ECONOMIC, POLITICAL, OR MILITARY--IS ONE OF OUR GREATEST STRENGTHS...

OLIGARCHY "THE POSSIBILITY THAT FREE MEN BECOME MERE COGS IN THE BUREAUCRATIC MACHINES WE SET UP FOR THIS PURPOSE IS ONE OF THE GREATES THREATS TO OUR LIBERTY"

RATIONALIZATION RATIONALIZATION REFERS TO THE INCREASING DOMINANCE OF ZWECKRATIONAL IN MODERN LIFE. THERE ARE THREE CHARACTERISTICS: EFFICIENCY CALCULABILITY DEMYSTIFICATION

EFFICIENCY REFERS TO THE DRIVE FOR EFFICIENCY BY ALL FORMAL SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS. THIS SEARCH FOR THE MOST EFFICIENT MEANS OF ATTAINING A GOAL HAS BECOME A MAJOR FORCE IN BOTH CAPITALIST AND GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION.

CALCULABILITY REFERS TO THE NEED FOR PREDICTABILITY AND ORDER IN SOCIAL LIFE. DATA SEEMINGLY TAKES ON A LIFE OF ITS OWN, THE REIFICATION OF NUMBERS AND STATISTICS BECOMES ALMOST AS IMPORTANT AS REALITY ITSELF.

DEMYSTIFICATION DEMYSTIFICATION MEANS THE ELIMINATION OF SPIRITUAL MEANING AND MORAL SIGNIFICANCE FROM SOCIAL LIFE AND THEIR REPLACEMENT BY SYSTEMATIC, LOGICAL, AND REASONABLE ELEMENTS.

DEMYSTIFICATION THE MODERN WORLD HAS BEEN DESERTED BY THE GODS. MAN HAS CHASED THEM AWAY AND HAS MADE CALCULABLE AND PREDICTABLE WHAT IN AN EARLIER AGE HAD BEEN GOVERNED BY HIS GRACE.

RATIONALIZATION BUREAUCRACIES ARE BUILT ON THE PRINCIPLES OF EFFICIENCY AND CALCULABILITY. THEY PROGRESSIVELY REPLACE TRADITIONAL SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS WITH RATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS DESIGNED TO PERFORM LIKE MACHINES.

RATIONALIZATION TO BECOME INDUSTRIALIZED IS TO BECOME RATIONALIZED, A PROCESS AFFECTING EVERY AREA OF SOCIETY, THE MOST PUBLIC AND THE MOST PRIVATE, THE STATE AND THE ECONOMY AS WELL AS THE REALTIONS OF MARIAGE, FAMILY, AND PERSONAL FRIENDSHIPS.

RATIONALIZATION THE RESULT IS A SOCIETY THAT IS CONSTANTLY QUESTIONING TRADITIONAL WAYS, ABSOLUTE VALUES, AND CONSTANTLY DEVISING MORE RATIONAL WAYS TO ACHIEVE DESIRED ENDS.

DEHUMANIZATION AS BUREAUCRACIES SATISFY, DELIGHT, AND SATIATE US WITH THEIR OUTPUT OF GOODS AND SERVICES, THEY ALSO SHAPE OUR MENTALITY, THEY DEFINE OUR VERY HUMANITY.

DEHUMANIZATION "THE CALCULABILTIY OF DECISION-MAKING...IS MORE FULLY REALIZED THE MORE THE BUREAUCRACY 'DEPERSONALIZES' ITSELF...

DEHUMANIZATION "THE MORE COMPLETELY IT SUCCEEDS IN ACHIEVING THE EXCLUSION OF LOVE, HATRED, AND EVERY PURELY PERSONAL-- ESPECIALLY IRRATIONAL AND INCALCULABLE--FEELING FROM THE EXECUTION OF OFFICIAL TASKS...

DEHUMANIZATION "IN THE PLACE OF THE OLD-TYPE RULER WHO IS MOVED BY SYMPATHY, FAVOR, GRACE, AND GRATITUDE, MODERN CULTURE REQUIRES FOR ITS SUSTAINING EXTERNAL APPARATUS THE EMOTIONALLY DETACHED, AND HENCE RIGOROUSLY PROFESSIONAL EXPERT."

DEHUMANIZATION ULTIMATELY, RATIONALIZATION MUST LEAD TO DEHUMANIZATION—THE ELIMINATION OF CONCERN FOR HUMAN VALUES.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR BUREAUCRACY IS NOT RATIONAL IN THE SENSE OF THE MORAL ACCEPTABILITY OF ITS GOALS OR THE MEANS USED TO ACHIEVE THEM.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR INDIVIDUAL OFFICIALS HAVE SPECIALIZED AND LIMITED RESPONSIBILITY AND AUTHORITY AND SO ARE UNLIKELY TO RAISE BASIC QUESTIONS REGARDING MORAL IMPLICATIONS.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR THE PROBLEM IS FURTHER COMPOUNDED BY THE CORRESPONDING WEAKENING OF MANY TRADITIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF FAMILY, COMMUNITY, AND RELIGION—WHICH SERVED TO BIND PRE-INDUSTRIAL MAN TO THE INTERESTS OF THE GROUP.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR FINALLY, RATIONALIZATION CAUSES THE WEAKENING OF TRADITIONAL AND RELIGIOUS MORAL AUTHORITY--THE VALUES OF EFFICIENCY PREDOMINATE.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR WEBER'S VIEWS ABOUT THE INESCAPABLE RATIONALIZATION AND BUREAUCRATIZATION OF THE WORLD HAVE OBVIOUS SIMILARITIES TO MARX'S NOTION OF ALINEATION.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR WEBER BELIEVED THAT THE ALIENATION DOCUMENTED BY MARX HAD LITTLE TO DO WITH CAPITALISM, BUT WAS A CONSEQUENCE OF INDUSTRIALISM AND BUREAUCRACY.

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR WEBER ARGUED THAT IN ALL RELEVANT SPHERES OF MODERN SOCIETY MEN COULD NO LONGER ENGAGE IN SOCIALLY SIGNIFICANT ACTION UNLESS THEY JOINED A LARGE-SCALE ORGANIZATION...

IRRATIONALITY FACTOR ...THEY WOULD BE ADMITTED INTO THIS ORGANIZATION ONLY UPON THE CONDITION THAT THEY SACRIFICED THEIR PERSONAL DESIRES TO THE IMPERSONAL GOALS AND PROCEDURES THAT GOVERNED THE WHOLE.

SOCIOCULTURAL EVOLUTION BECAUSE BUREAUCRACY IS A FORM OF ORGANIZATION SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS, FURTHER BUREAUCRATIZATION AND RATIONALIZATION IS AN INESCAPABLE FATE.

SOCIOCULTURAL EVOLUTION "IT IS APPARENT THAT TODAY WE ARE PROCEEDING TOWARDS AN EVOLUTION WHICH RESEMBLES (THE ANCIENT KINGDOM OF EGYPT) IN EVERY DETAIL, EXCEPT THAT IT IS BUILT ON OTHER FOUNDATIONS, ON TECHNICALLY MORE PERFECT, MORE RATIONALIZED, AND THEREFORE MUCH MORE MECHANIZED FOUNDATIONS."

SOCIOCULTURAL EVOLUTION "THE PROBLEM WHICH BESETS US NOW IS NOT: HOW CAN THIS EVOLUTION BE CHANGED?--FOR THAT IS IMPOSSIBLE, BUT: WHAT WILL COME OF IT?"

REPUTED LAST WORDS OF MAX WEBER: “THE TRUTH IS THE TRUTH."

BIBLIOGRAPHY Elwell, F. (2009), Macrosociology: The Study of Sociocultural Systems. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press. Weber, M. (1962). Basic Concepts in Sociology by Max Weber. (H. Secher, Ed., & H. Secher, Trans.) New York: The Citadel Press. Weber, M. (1921/1968). Economy and Society. (G. Roth, C. Wittich, Eds., G. Roth, & C. Wittich, Trans.) New York: Bedminster Press. Weber, M. (1946/1958). Essays in Sociology. In M. Weber, H. Gerth, & C. W. Mills (Eds.), From Max Weber. New York: Oxford University Press.

BIBLIOGRAPHY Weber, M. (1925/1954). Max Weber on Law in Economy and Society. (E. Shils, & M. Rheinstein, Trans.) New York: Simon and Schuster. Weber, M. (1903-1917/1949). The Methodology of the Social Sciences. (E. Shils, H. Finch, Eds., E. Shills, & H. Finch, Trans.) New York: Free Press. Weber, M. (1904/1930). The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. (T. Parsons, Trans.) New York: The Citadel Press.