Weber's Concept of Causality and the Modern Critique |
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Authors: | Susan J. Hekman |
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Affiliation: | The University of Texas at Arlington |
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Abstract: | Weber's concept of causality established a middle ground between the extremes of the causality debate in his day by developing a concept that was unique in two respects: it was tailored to the needs of the distinctive subject matter of the social sciences, meaningful human action, and it utilized the legal model of causal analysis. Interpreted in this light, Weber's concept meets several of the criticisms of the use of causal analysis in the social sciences recently advanced by Peters and Winch. |
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