En un intento por reevaluar la monumental obra La ética protestante y el espíritu del capitalismo, Jack Barbalet, profesor de sociología en la University of Western Sydney, se consagró a la tarea de publicar Weber, Passion and Profits: ‘The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism’ in Context, un pormenorizado recorrido por la genealogía de tan importante obra weberiana.
Este texto, como indica la breve descripción provista por la editorial, indaga en anteriores y posteriores escritos a la redacción de La ética zurciendo detenidamente vitales conceptos weberianos como son “profesión” y “racionalidad”.
Para el autor, La ética protestante no sólo devela magistralmente los orígenes culturales del capitalismo, sino al mismo tiempo constituye una alegoría vinculada con la Alemania de aquélla época.
Ya situado en el análisis puntual de los cimientos éticos del espíritu capitalista y la estructura institucional del capitalismo, Jack Barbalet identifica ciertas continuidades entre Weber y el fundador de la ciencia económica Adam Smith, así como con su coetáneo americano Thorstein Veblen.
Sin duda, una publicación que despertará gran interés en los círculos weberianos más apasionados.
—Visto en Golublog
Índice
From the inaugural lecture to the Protestant Ethic: political education and German futures
The inaugural lecture
Religion and economic outcomes
Political education and calling
Minding the gap
Science and values
Conclusion
From the Protestant Ethic to the vocation lectures: Beruf, rationality and emotion
Beruf, rationality and the modern personality
Beruf, rationality and emotion in the Protestant Ethic
Beruf, rationality and emotion in the vocation lectures
Weber’s retreat from ascetic rationalism
Conclusion
Passions and profits: the emotional origins of capitalism in seventeenth-century England
Passions
A presentation of Passions of the Minde
Management of passion by means of passion
Expression of emotions
Capitalism, seventeenth-century Catholicism and cultural apparatus for market actors
Conclusion
Protestant virtues and deferred gratification: Max Weber and Adam Smith on the spirit of capitalism
Moral Sentiments as a sociological text
Protestant virtues
Deferred gratification
Self-control and self-command
Emotion and reason in self-command
Smith’s social principles and Weber’s religious legitimation
Conclusion
Ideal-type, institutional and evolutionary analyses of the origins of capitalism: Max Weber and Thorstein Veblen
Capitalist personality
Capitalist institutions
The state and capitalism
The variable incidence of capitalism
The religious factor, again
Ideal-type method
Evolutionary method
Instincts and institutions
Conclusion
The Jewish question: religious doctrine and sociological method
Jewish rationalism, Protestant rationalism
The Jews as a ‘pariah people’
Anti-Semitism and Jewish marginalization
Talmud or social relations
Values and practices
The ideal type and universal values
Religious belief as a social cause
Conclusion
Detalles del libro
Título
Weber, Passion and Profits
Subtítulo
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in Context