Jackie Fellows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Hi Doc
When you read Weber just remember his childhood and the fact that he supposedly
never consummated his marriage--accounts for his writing style, perhaps <G>.
You must have had a Parsonian theory teacher--I still have dreams about AGIL.
jackief
DocCec wrote:
> DocCec <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> In a message dated 98-03-12 06:03:29 EST, you write:
>
> << Thanks for clarifying. Somehow that sounds poetic in a way, much better
> than
> disease or even disorder. One of my teachers once said that the early
> writers
> in the social sciences wrote more colorfully and poetically and that is why
> she
> thought they were more enjoyable to read. She felt they used metaphors and
> painted pictures for the reader. Of course she studied in England and her
> dissertation tied Freud and Parson together, so that may account for some of
> her
> thoughts on this.
>
> jackief >>
>
> Anyone who finds Talcott Parsons colorful or poetic can't be all bad! I can
> even stretch a point for Emile Durkheim (maybe just because French is such a
> poetic language) though Max Weber stumps me.
> Doc
>
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--
In the sociology room the children learn
that even dreams are colored by your perspective
I toss and turn all night. Theresa Burns, "The Sociology Room"
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