Sentences with phrase «sociological categories»

This form of visual cataloguing is most significantly seen in the Bechers» «New Objectivity» forebearer August Sander, who grouped his subjects in pre-determined sociological categories in his magnum opus «People of the 20th Century».
Sanders» remarkable encyclopedic archive comprises more than 600 photographs shot between 1910 and the early «50s, and creates a provocative collective portrait of the artist's fellow citizens, grouped according to determined sociological categories.
When such schools are located in a cultural context marked by the «triumph of the therapeutic,» [19] there is a strong tendency, to construe those conditions in psychological and sociological categories and to equate the requisite knowledgeabilitv with counseling skills and related psychoanalytical and social - psychological theory.
The question is whether Cobb in the end measures ecclesial decline in theological or sociological categories.
Second, it offers an inquiry into the principles (causes, laws, values), the forms (media, personnel, action, and atmosphere), and finally the general sociological categories of religious communality, in virtual if not conscious agreement with the theories of Scheler, Litt, and Mead.
Is professional not a sociological category?
At any rate, Tonnies, who first coined the word «Gemeinschaft» as a sociological category, used the term in both a descriptive and a critical sense.
The corresponding sociological category is the group (der Bund), as we lately have been so beautifully shown.6 Certain attitudes which determine the action of the members of this circle either for or against one another are applicable only out of a background of communal character.

Not exact matches

Editor's Reply We would simply note that at a question and answer session with representatives of the new movements held at Pentecost Pope Francis made the following comment, which seems to dovetail with the emphasis Mr Keeffe places on devotion to the Real Presence: For us Christians, poverty is not a sociological, philosophical or cultural category.
C. Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination (New York: Oxford University Press, 1959), exhibits the categories of discernment that have been generated and nurtured by sociology.
Often drawing upon autobiographical, art historical or sociological sources, Ruby's work is frequently referred to as «post-humanist» — a term that broadly describes a society which, thanks in part to technological advancement, has evolved beyond fixed categories of being (e.g. time / place), or predetermining classifications (e.g. animal / human).
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