ABSTRACT

Max Weber’s lecture ‘Science as a Vocation’ is a classic of social thought, in which central questions are posed about the nature of social and political thought and action. The lecture has often taken to be a summation of Weber’s thought. It can also be argued that, together with the responses of its admirers and critics, it provides a focus for discussion of the nature of modernity and its political consequences, and of the philosophical and political implications of the social or human sciences. This volume provides a full, clear, revised translation of the lecture, together with translations from the German of key contributions to the lively debate that followed its publication. The book concludes with a substantial essay on the current significance of the lecture, which discusses its relevance to the debates about the nature of science as a cultural phenomenon; the disjunction between science and nature; Weber’s conception of the disenchantment of the world; the division of scientific labour; and the fundamental nature and place of sociology.

part |31 pages

Part I

chapter 1|29 pages

Max Weber

Science as a Vocation

part |124 pages

Part II

chapter 2|12 pages

Erich von Kahler

The Vocation of Science

chapter 3|11 pages

Arthur Salz

For Science: Against the Intellectuals among Its Despisers

chapter 4|12 pages

Ernst Troeltsch

The Revolution in Science

chapter 5|6 pages

Ernst Robert Curtius

Max Weber on Science as a Vocation

chapter 6|11 pages

Heinrich Rickert

Max Weber's View of Science

chapter 7|5 pages

Max Scheler

Sociology and the Study and Formulation of Weltanschauung

chapter 8|7 pages

Max Scheler

Max Weber's Exclusion of Philosophy (On the Psychology and Sociology of Nominalist Thought)

chapter 9|13 pages

Siegfried Landshut

Max Weber's Significance for Intellectual History

chapter 10|10 pages

Erich Wittenberg

The Crisis of Science in Germany in 1919

chapter 11|16 pages

Erik Wolf

Max Weber's Ethical Criticism and the Problem of Metaphysics

chapter 12|19 pages

Karl Löwith

Max Weber's Position on Science

part |48 pages

Part III

chapter 13|46 pages

Peter Lassman and Irving Velody

Max Weber on Science, Disenchantment and the Search for Meaning