Durkheim was one of the first to point to the connection between religion and other forms of knowledge. He claimed that it was through religion that humans first attempted to interpret the world and that it is from religion that other ways of thinking, such as science, evolved. Weber argued that as societies became industrialised, rational and scientific ideas would destroy traditional and irrational sources of authority and belief such as religion. Our way of interpreting the world became in Weber's terms less enchanted and sacred.
Rationalisation as an ideal type and as an historical force appears in much of Weber's writings. He regards the development of rational forms to be one of the most important characteristics of the development of Western society and capitalism. Weber particularly looked at the protestant work ethic and saw that unlike Catholics who confessed that they are assured a place in heaven the Calvinists believed in an all powerful god who decided thus they felt a necessity to work hard in this world - in order to try to get to be one of the chosen