The Norton History of the Human Sciences

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W. W. Norton & Company, 1997 - 1036 páginas
This erudite yet accessible volume in Norton's highly praised History of Science series tracks the long and circuitous path by which human beings came to see themselves and their societies as scientific subjects like any other. Beginning with the Renaissance's rediscovery of Greek psychology, political philosophy, and ethics, Roger Smith recounts how the human sciences gradually organized themselves around a scientific conception of psychology, and how this trend has continued to the present day in a circle of interactions between science and ordinary life, in which the human sciences have influenced and been influenced by popular culture.
 

Contenido

10
25
The Dignity of
37
The Spirits and Humours
56
The Province of Natural
83
The Worlds Peoples
94
Samuel Pufendorf on Natural
112
Body and Soul
118
John Locke and the Natural History of the Soul
157
Auguste Comte and Karl Marx
421
Human Evolution
452
The Academic Disciplines of Psychology
492
The Academic Disciplines of Sociology
530
Psychological Society
575
of the Child
616
Natural Science and Objectivity
636
Reason and Unreason
701

The Principles of Rational Science
184
G W Leibniz
190
Natural and Moral Philosophy
215
Human Diversity and Sociability
260
Political Economy
301
Culture of the Spirit
337
Academic Disciplines and Public Values
371
The Individual and the Social
746
The Past and the Present
799
Notes
871
Bibliographic Essay
903
Index
1009
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Acerca del autor (1997)

Roger Smithhas written for television and films since the early sixties; his screenplays include Up the Junction. He has worked with Ken Loach as a script consultant for the past fifteen years and is also a theater director. He is the author of Tycoonery and Inhibition: History and Meaning in the Sciences of Mind and Brain.

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