Gabriel Tarde eBooks

eBooks di Gabriel Tarde editi da Forgotten Books

Gabriel Tarde (1843-1904) è stato un magistrato, filosofo, sociologo e criminologo francese. Pensatore originale e antiaccademico, ha trascorso gli ultimi anni della sua vita come docente al Collège de France (1900-1904). La sua opera è vastissima, e grande interesse hanno suscitato, e continuano a suscitare, i suoi scritti di criminologia e i suoi studi sulla psicologia delle folle. Filosofo per passione, soprattutto in giovane età, ha lasciato alcuni scritti che sono oggetto di rinnovato interesse. Considerato uno dei padri della sociologia, la sua fama odierna – dovuta a un vero e proprio rinascimento negli ultimi due decenni – è direttamente legata al concetto di imitazione (Les lois de l’imitation, 1890) di cui ha definito le “leggi” nelle scienze umane e sociali.
EBOOK   9780259688969

Underground Man. E-book. Formato PDF Gabriel Tarde   -  Forgotten Books, 2017  - 

The whole of Tarde is in this little book.He has put into it along with a charming fancy his genialness and depth of spirit, his ideas on the influence of art and the importance of love, in an exceptional social milieu.This agreeable daydream is vigorously thought out. On reading it we fancy we are again seeing and hearing Tarde. In order to indulge in a repetition of the illusion, a pious friendship has desired to clothe this fascinating work in an appropriate dress.

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EBOOK   9780243703944

The Laws of Imitation. E-book. Formato PDF Gabriel Tarde   -  Forgotten Books, 2017  - 

But motives, and those impersonal forces that are not motives, work out results in an orderly fashion, by definite modes, which are the chief subj ect — matter of scientific study, and to the explanation of modes of activity M. Tarde was to make noteworthy contributions. Among the phenomena that early arrested his attention was imitation. From his office of magistrate he observed the large part that imitation plays in criminal conduct. Does it play a smaller part in normal conduct? Very rapidly M. Tarde's ardent mind ranged over the field of history, followed the spread of Western civilisation, and reviewed the development of lan guage, the evolution of art, of law, and of institutions. The evidence was overwhelming that in all the affairs of men, whether of good or of evil report, imitation is an ever-pres ent factor; and to a philosophical mind the implication was obvious, that there must be psychological or sociolog ical laws of imitation, worthy of most thorough study. At this time sociology was represented in France by dis ciples of Comte and by a few interested readers of Herbert Spencer. The thoughts of the Comtists did not range far beyond the hierarchy of the sciences, and the three stages of history. To demonstrate the place of sociology in the hierarchy, or to show that a social fact belonged to one or another stage, was very nearly the limit of Comtist sociological ambition. The Spencerians, on the other hand, seizing upon Spencer's proposition that society is an organism, — but neglecting most of the psychological and historical elements of his system, — were busy elaborat ing biological analogies.

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