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The Decomposition of Sociology Irving Louis Horowitz (Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Rutgers University)

The Decomposition of Sociology By Irving Louis Horowitz (Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Rutgers University)

Summary

Horowitz's powerful book discusses the decline of sociology as an academic discipline. He shows how sociologists have become more and more involved in ideological critiques of modern society and, in the process, have abandoned the objective approach which has always been a central quality in the social sciences.

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The Decomposition of Sociology Summary

The Decomposition of Sociology by Irving Louis Horowitz (Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Rutgers University)

Sociology, writes Irving Louis Horowitz, has changed from a central discipline of the social sciences to an ideological outpost of political extremism. As a result, the field is in crisis. Some departments have been shut down, others cut back, research programs have dried up, and the growth of professional organizations and student enrolments have been either curbed or atrophied. In The Decomposition of Sociology, Professor Horowitz, for four decades a leading social scientist, offers a frank and full account of the maelstrom engulfing this field. Horowitz pulls no punches in this provocative volume. He charges that much contemporary sociological theory has degenerated into pure critique, strongly influenced by Marxist dogmatism. Such thinking has a strong element of anti-American and anti-Western bias, in which all questions have one answer-the evil of capitalism-and all problems one solution-the good of socialism. In criminology, for instance, he shows that high crime rates are seen as an expression of capitalist disintegration, and criminal behaviour a covert expression of radical action. Indeed, in one area after another, Horowitz shows how this same formulaic thinking dominates the field, resulting in a crude reductionist view of contemporary social life. At a time when the world is moving closer to the free market and democratic norms, he concludes, such reductionist tendencies and ideological posturings are outmoded. Horowitz offers an alternative. He urges a larger vision of the social sciences, one in which universities, granting agencies and research institutes provide an environment in which research may be untainted by partisan agencies-where policy choices will not be hindered by the prevailing cultural climate. He counsels sociologists to move away from blind advocacy, to meet the challenges of the twenty-first century by incorporating the knowledge of other times and places, and to take into account the shrinking globe-in short, to develop and maintain a new set of universal standards in this era of a world culture. Here then is an eloquent plea for a revolution in sociology, written by one of the field's foremost figures. It offers as well a cautionary tale about the potentially devastating effect of ideology on scholarly pursuits.

The Decomposition of Sociology Reviews

Irving Louis Horowitz has set forth clearly, and I believe irrefutably, the nature of the decomposition of sociology. Horowitz's work is absolutely in the tradition so luminously described by Max Weber in his two great addresses on Politics as a Vocation and Science as a Vocation. * Robert A. Nisbet, in The Sociological Tradition *

About Irving Louis Horowitz (Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Rutgers University)

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Additional information

CIN0195092562G
9780195092561
0195092562
The Decomposition of Sociology by Irving Louis Horowitz (Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Hannah Arendt Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Political Science, Rutgers University)
Used - Good
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
1995-01-05
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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