Adam 5nilth and 

 riodern Sociology 



A STUDY IN THE flETHODOLOGY 

 OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES 



ALBION W. SMALL 



•"rilE volume is the first of a series which the 

 1 author will edit on the preparations for soci- 

 ology in the fragmentary work of the nineteenth- 

 century social sciences. The main argument of 

 the book is that modern sociology is virtually an 

 attempt to take up the larger program of social 

 analysis and interpretation which was im- 

 plicit in Adam Smith's moral philosophy, but 

 which was suppressed for a century by prevailing 

 interest in the technique of the production of 

 wealth. It is both a plea for revision of the 

 methods of the social sciences, and asy-mptom of 

 the reconstruction that is already in progress. 

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An Exposition of the Main Development 

 in Sociological Theory, from Spencer 



to Ratzenhofer 



By ALBION W. SMALL 



Professor and Head of the Department of Sociol- 

 ogy in the University of Chicago 



N this important book Professor Small brings his 

 wide reading and keen analytical powers to bear 

 on the history of sociology and its present claims to 

 be regarded as a science. These claims have often 

 been disputed, on the ground that the material o( 

 sociology has already been pre-empted by the recog- 

 nized social sciences— ethnology , history, economics, 

 etc. Professor Small's answer is that the work of 

 co-ordinating these various groups, of surveying the 

 process of human association as a whole, is a task 

 distinct from that of a worker in one of the special 

 fields, and that the body of knowledge so gained 

 legitimately ranks as a science. In other words, 

 sociology is to social science in general what neu- 

 rology is to medicine. It is addressed to histonans. 

 economists, political scientists, psychologists, and 

 moralists, quite as much as to sociologists. 



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RICHMOND HEliDERSON 



,V SMALL volume which presents an English 

 n. translation of all the reports made to 

 the last International Prison Congress at iiuoa- 

 pest, together with accounts of various larm 

 colonies in Belgium and Switzerland, and ot oui- 

 door work of prisoners in the United States. 

 The book contains the largest body of exper 

 opinion and of fact to be found anv^here on 

 this subject, and the conclusions offered ar 

 based on the results of experiments maaei 

 nearly all civilized countries. The editor sums 

 up the argument and recommendations, wi 

 special reference to American conditions, i 

 .opic is of burning interest to all business men, 

 trade-unions, and legislators who wish to ^i^ y 

 the problem of prison labor in the light ot 

 the facts. . , 



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