A Century of Dialogue around Durkheim as a Founding Father of the Social Sciences.

Autor: van Binsbergen, Wim
Předmět:
Zdroj: Culture & Dialogue; 2021, Vol. 9 Issue 2, p167-200, 34p
Abstrakt: In 2012 social scientists, philosophers and religious scientists celebrated the centennial of the publication of one of the most seminal books in the modern study of religion, Les formes élémentaires de la vie religieuse , by the then leading French sociologist Emile Durkheim's (1858–1917); in 2017, we commemorated that author's untimely death at age 59, broken by World War I in which he lost his only son and many of his beloved students. Educated, first as a Rabinnical student then as a modern philosopher, Durkheim earned his place among French thinkers primarily as a "founding father" of the social sciences. Having recently (on the basis of a life-long preoccupation) devoted a book-length study to Durkheim's religion theory, I intend in this essay to highlight major aspects of Durkheim as an exponent of French thought. I shall first briefly situate Durkheim in his time and age, with special emphasis on his political views and his ethnic identity as a secularised Jew. Then I turn to Durkheim's relation with the discipline in which he was originally trained, philosophy. I shall pay attention to the complex relationship between Durkheim and Kant and further highlight his dualism, epistemology, and views on primitive classification, as well as his puzzling realism, the place of emergence in his thought, and his moralist tendencies. I shall finally articulate Durkheim's transition to sociology and how he gave over the torch of emerging sociology to his main students, having thus created an adequate context in which to discuss Durkheim's final masterpiece (Les formes) and the still dominant theory of religion it expounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index