Illuminating Max Weber’s Sociology of Law and Methodological Writings
Collected Essays
Series: Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 8 July 2026
- ISBN 9781041021568
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages192 pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Weight 453 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 5 Tables, black & white 700
Categories
Short description:
This volume of collected essays by Hubert Treiber, one of Weber’s leading interpreters and an authoritative expert on Weber’s sociology of law, brings a number of translated works to English-speaking readers, offering the opportunity to gain a fuller and a more accurate understanding of Max Weber’s legal thinking.
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Long description:
This volume of collected essays by Hubert Treiber, one of Weber’s leading interpreters and an authoritative expert on Weber’s sociology of law, brings a number of translated works to English-speaking readers, offering the opportunity to gain a fuller and a more accurate understanding of Max Weber’s legal thinking.
The book contains six essays by Treiber, and an important essay by Monika Frommel in response to Treiber. Throughout the collection, the chapters are united by the thread of Treiber’s consistent attempts to provide historical contexts and to clarify Weber’s legal concepts and definitions. The concepts discussed communicate to English readers the specific meanings that Weber associated with them in the German original, and which may have been missed by those who do not know German or who have historically relied on imprecise translations.
As such, it brings together and makes accessible a new and important body of knowledge concerning Max Weber’s sociology of law and will appeal to scholars and researchers with interests in Max Weber, social theory, philosophy of law, jurisprudence, and philosophy of social sciences.
MoreTable of Contents:
Introduction 1. A Critical Reading of Max Weber on the Law and the Rationalisation of the Law (The ‘Sociology of Law’) 2. “Objectivising Knowledge” Rather Than “Artistic Suggestiveness” or “Tact”: On a Forgotten Term and a Neglected Author in Max Weber’s “Theory of Science” 3. Max Weber and Eugen Ehrlich: On the Janus-Headed Construction of Weber’s Ideal Type in the Sociology of Law. 4. On Weber’s Types of Empirical and Scientifico-theoretical Legal Training, and his Partiality for ‘Logic’ 5. On Max Weber’s Concept of Power 6. Max Weber’s Conception of the State: The State as Anstalt and as Validated Conception with especial reference to Kelsen’s Critique of Weber Appendix I Original Sources
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