000 01323pab a2200193 454500
008 180718b2007 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aSwedberg, Richard
245 _aMax Weber's interpretive economic sociology
260 _c2007
300 _ap.1035-055.
362 _aApr
520 _aEconomic sociology needs more ideas, and in this article the author suggests that economic sociologists may want to explore what a rigorous interpretive economic sociolgogy along Weberian lines would look like. One way to proceed in an enterprise of this type would be to apply the model of analysis that can be found in chapter I of Economy and Society to economic sociology and its problems. This means that one has to graft onto economic sociology such key ideas and key concepts in Weber's interpretive sociology as adequate causation, the need to always explore the meaning of actors, and what consequences these meanings have for the resulting action. What a concrete Weberian type of interpretive economic sociology will be like cannot, however, be determined this way. It needs instead to be worked out through concrete, empirical analysis. - Reproduced.
650 _aMeber, Max
650 _aSociology
650 _aEconomic sociology
773 _aAmerican Behavioral Scientist
908 _aN
909 _a73845
999 _c73845
_d73845