チャット
マックス・ウェーバー

マックス・ウェーバー

社会学者

チャットを始める

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概要

社会学方法論の創設
「プロテスタンティズムの倫理と資本主義の精神」執筆
官僚制理論の提唱

「プロテスタンティズムの倫理と資本主義の精神」。「鉄の檻」理論。思想が経済をどう形作るかを説明した社会学の創始者。

会話のきっかけ

人生の歩み

1864Born in Erfurt

Maximilian Karl Emil Weber was born to a wealthy, politically connected family. He would become one of the founders of modern sociology.

1882Enters University of Heidelberg

Began studying law at Heidelberg while also taking courses in economics, history, and philosophy. He joined his father's dueling fraternity.

1889Completes doctoral thesis

Completed his doctoral thesis on medieval trading companies. His scholarship already showed remarkable breadth.

1893Appointed professor

Appointed professor of economics at the University of Berlin. He was also newly married to Marianne Schnitger.

1894Moves to Freiburg

Appointed professor of economics at the University of Freiburg. His inaugural lecture on national economics caused controversy.

1897Mental breakdown

Suffered a severe mental breakdown after a confrontation with his father, who died shortly afterward. He could not work for years.

1903Returns to scholarship

Resumed scholarly work, becoming an associate editor of a major sociology journal. He never returned to regular teaching.

1905Publishes Protestant Ethic

Published 'The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,' arguing that Calvinist beliefs shaped modern capitalism. It became one of sociology's foundational texts.

1908Founds German Sociological Association

Co-founded the German Sociological Association. He was establishing sociology as a distinct academic discipline.

1913Develops verstehen methodology

Elaborated his method of interpretive understanding (verstehen), arguing that social science must understand the meaning actors give to their actions.

1914World War I service

Initially supported the war and served as a reserve officer directing hospitals. He later became critical of German war leadership.

1918Advises on Weimar Constitution

Advised on the drafting of the Weimar Constitution after Germany's defeat. His concepts of bureaucracy and legitimate domination influenced the design.

1919Professorship at Munich

Accepted a professorship at Munich and gave his famous lectures 'Science as a Vocation' and 'Politics as a Vocation.'

1920Death in Munich

Died of pneumonia in Munich, leaving 'Economy and Society' unfinished. His concepts of bureaucracy, authority, rationalization, and the 'iron cage' of modernity remain central to social science.