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    Form of Surveillance

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    Big Brother Form of Surveillance – Workplace 2). In relating your answer to the ideas of your chosen theorist you will need to say how the surveillance relates to at least two of the following: (a) caring‚ (b) control‚ (c) risk‚ (d) knowledge‚ (e) security‚ and (f) health. 3) Discuss how this surveillance relates to your own experiences. Say how it affects you. Does it improve your security? Does it restrict your freedom? Is it good or bad for you? Has it improved your lot? 5) Discuss

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    Ideal Types of Authorities

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    SOC 1301-01 Ideal Types of Authorities According to Max Weber‚ there are three kinds of authority: the legal rational authority‚ the charismatic authority and the traditional authority. President Nixon‚ Adolf Hitler and Moroccan Monarch Hassan II were all great leaders. However‚ the source of their powerful domination and their political leadership differ from one to another. In fact‚ considering a “Weberian” classification‚ we will consider Nixon as a legal rational leader‚ Hitler as a charismatic

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    interaction between various religious ideas and economic behavior. In The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism‚ Weber puts forward the thesis that the Puritan ethic and ideas influenced the development of capitalism. Religious devotion has usually been accompanied by rejection of mundane affairs‚ including economic pursuit. Why was that not the case with Protestantism? Weber addresses that paradox in his essay. He defines "the spirit of capitalism" as the ideas and habits that

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    Weber's Protestant Ethic

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    An analysis of Max Weber’s “Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism” A. A HISTORICAL BACKGROUND TO THE FORMATION OF THE TEXT: The writing of Weber indicates his sensitivity to diverse cultural meanings and his ability to find an ‘ethos’ or ‘geist” i.e. a spirit is largely indicative not of repudiating Marx’s economic analysis of society‚ but rather of rounding off Marx’s writings whilst valuing empathy‚ or understanding – ‘verstehen’ – in Weber’s native German. One of the primary questions

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    facilities‚ teacher training‚ compulsory education‚ differentiated education and general control over education. Weber contributes to the educational administration through his Weberian Bureaucratic Model‚ in which bureaucracy is defined as a concept in sociology and political science referring to the way that administrative execution and enforcement of legal rules are socially organized. Max Weber in his Bureaucratic model considers the structure of offices and management of organization such as schools

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    Is Class Relevant Today

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    Is class still relevant in Australia? To facilitate this question‚ the readings of Karl Marx‚ Fredrick Engels‚ Max Weber‚ Helen Marshall‚ R.W. Connell and T.H. Irving will be considered. Connell & Irving (1992) identify ‘class structure’ in Australia with the ‘ruling class’ owning property/business‚ and the ‘working class’ in the way of labourers whom ‘act together in resistance to the capitalists’. This is relevant today in Australia with the privileged having majority of the power and wealth

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    ideal type bureacracy

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    Max Weber argued that bureaucracy constitutes the most efficient and rational way in which human activity can be organized‚ and that systematic processes and organized hierarchies were necessary to maintain order‚ maximize efficiency and eliminate favoritism. But even Weber saw bureaucracy as a threat to individual freedom‚ in which the increasing bureaucratization of human life traps individuals in an "iron cage" of rule-based‚ rational control. Max Weber The German sociologist Max Weber described

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    Weber’s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism is a study of the relationship between the ethics of ascetic Protestantism and the emergence of the spirit of modern capitalism. Weber argues that the religious ideas of groups such as the Calvinists played a role in creating the capitalistic spirit. Weber first observes a correlation between being Protestant and being involved in business‚ and declares his intent to explore religion as a potential cause of the modern economic conditions. He

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    Max Weber’s observations and conclusions regarding modernity and its causes have named him one of the most influential sociologists of our era. Weber believed that in the West rationality had come to become the predominant impetus for action. Weber said that Rationality was one of four motivations towards actions--the remaining three‚ Traditional‚ Affective‚ and Value-Oriented‚ had been based on more humanistic qualities and had all faded into almost insignificance in the modern age. He thought that

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    Idealism and Materialism as General Approaches to Understanding Society Both Karl Marx and Max Weber had very different ways of looking at the societies economic system. Marx’s strong beliefs in what would make society thrive were in the materialism approach and Weber’s was in the idealism approach. Karl Marx believed that the majority of societies problems came from the industrial capitalist system; this is the system that was making the rich‚ richer and the poor‚ poorer‚ with the larger portion

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