Thorstein Veblen

Couverture
Transaction Publishers - 221 pages

This is a brilliant and unconventional study of one of the most challenging figures in modern social and economic thought. David Riesman has chosen a deliberately personal method of exposition and evaluation, and he is by no means a disciple. He says of Veblen: â I find him more often interesting than attractive, more often pungent than wise.â By approaching Veblen subjectively and in a critical spirit, Riesman has arrived at an estimate of the man that is objective and balanced.

Veblen's ideas and attitudes are carefully examined, with particular attention to his conviction that â the instinct of workmanshipâ was the constructive element in life, and to his fundamental principle of â idle curiosity.â Veblen is seen as a man with a passionate moral sense whose method was irony coupled with research. Riesman makes the interesting point that the author of The Theory of the Leisure Class was episodically a passionate, even revolutionary reformer, in contrast to a career primarily as an intellectual skeptic.

Riesman looks behind the ideas, searching for their origins in Veblen's life, with the result that one finishes the book with a genuine sense of the strange man who is its subject. Riesman concludes that Thorstein Veblen is important not so much for his specific contribution to economic thought as for his stance toward the economy and his fellow economists. For us today, Riesman adds, Veblen's great value inheres in his way of seeing. The new introduction by Mestrovic provides an appreciation of Riesman, no less than Veblen.

David Riesman is the Henry Ford II Professor Emeritus of Social Sciences at Harvard University. He has also taught at the University of Chicago, and Johns Hopkins University. Among his most important books are The Lonely Crowd; Faces in the Crowd; Individualism Reconsidered; and Constraint and Variety in American Education. His collection, Abundance for What?, confirms his place as the foremost sociologist of education in the modern era.

Stjepan G. Mestrovic is a senior social theorist in his own right. He is currently located at Texas A&M University, where he is a professor of sociology.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

GIANT OUT OF THE EARTH
1
VEBLENS SYSTEM OF SOCIAL SCIENCE
45
BUSINESS VERSUS FULL PRODUCTION
78
SCIENTISTS VERSUS CAPTAINS OF ERUDITION
99
VEBLEN AND THE LIFE OF ACTION
114
THE COMMON MAN VERSUS THE STATE
126
THE REFORM OF ECONOMICS
141
LEISURE AND URBAN PASTORAL
170
CHRONOLOGY
209
A LIST OF VEBLENS BOOKS
210
SELECTIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY
211
SELECTIVE INDEX
215
Droits d'auteur

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Page xlii - But history records more frequent and more spectacular instances of the triumph of imbecile institutions over life and culture than of peoples who have by force of instinctive insight saved themselves alive out of a desperately precarious institutional situation, such, for instance, as now faces the peoples of Christendom.
Page 10 - I am Thorstein Veblen.' He told Laughlin of his academic history, his enforced idleness, and his desire to go on with his studies. The fellowships had all been filled, but Laughlin was so impressed with the quality of the man that he went to the president and other powers of the university and secured a special grant."8 Apart from the impression that Veblen's manner and dress so conveyed, the account is important for another reason.
Page xli - London, through New York and Boston and Concord, through church and state, through poetry and philosophy and religion, till we come to a hard bottom and rocks in place, which we can call reality, and say, This is, and no mistake...

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