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Query was: social

Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Forword
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    • social renewal.
    • rapidly the effects of the scientific world-view on the modern social
    • think of social renewal until we have considered these questions. What
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture I
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    • concepts, new notions, and new impulses for social life generally: we
    • need ideas which, when realized, can create social conditions offering
    • circles that social renewal must begin with a renewal of our thinking.
    • the ideas upon which one might found a social economy offering man a
    • the old, instinctive ties within the social order began to slacken:
    • about what one might call a transformation of the old social instincts
    • element that had entered into social science, into this favorite son of
    • a web of social forces woven from such concepts? If we listen to the
    • can and cannot contribute to an appropriate social order and an idea
    • so impotent in our thinking about social questions. Many today still
    • ignorabimus was spoken also with regard to all social thought.
    • something more than an ignorabimus in order to meet the social
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture II
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    • from modern scientific theories that can become a vital social thinking
    • men with radical scientific and social views, who felt themselves to
    • life as social impulses. One can argue conceptually about contrary world
    • cognition, something that has proved itself to be socially useless in
    • how can we find a mode of thinking that can be useful in social life?
    • for social life.
    • social life. We thus are confronted in the first half of the nineteenth
    • as a basis for judgments that are socially viable.
    • clarity: one feels that, applied to social thinking, this clarity makes
    • man into a cog in a social order modeled on mathematics or mechanics
    • social chaos we are now experiencing. One must understand this connection
    • social judgments.
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture IV
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    • deep within man that weaves together the impulses of our moral-social
    • over into the social life. At that time I sought to make two points
    • those who would strive to fulfil the social and cognitional needs of
    • ego becomes antisocial. As we have seen,
    • attempts to replace Stirner's egoism with something truly social.
    • thus can bear fruit within the social life. The quality of our social
    • as this, which can at the same time embrace the social. That this is
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture V
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    • or even contemporary social science — which is so useless in the
    • to translate one's knowledge into social judgments, in other words, if
    • translate them into a social science that can become truly practical,
    • the same time forward into the social future. I have shown that at the
    • inclination, an impulse that rumbles within the social upheavals our
    • develop a thinking that can grasp the realities of social life. Similar
    • of Inspiration — one of the great talks of contemporary social
    • a social blessing for all humanity.
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VI
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    • enabling him to conceive ideas that can then be effected in social life.
    • of the very greatest importance for social life: the concept of capital,
    • actually means within the social process, to see how that which human
    • of labor within the social organism. Then look at the hopelessly inadequate
    • the question: what function does capital have within the social organism?
    • the social organism. Only true Imagination can bring real comprehension
    • of this part of the social organism. And one will come to realize something
    • functioning within the social organism when one no longer understands
    • understood as a function of the socially contracted majority of human
    • through the worker associations — the social concept, the concept
    • giving rise to the social forms we must develop if we wish to reverse
    • and social impulses as really can buoy up an age so rapidly sinking
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VII
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    • as allow us to become useful members of the social community we form
    • are introduced into social life among other human beings by the possession
    • and the like or to seek social intercourse with one's fellow men in an
    • socially with one's fellow men in the right way. Then precisely that
    • learns to hate interaction with his fellow men and becomes antisocial.
    • impulses that are now exploding in social cataclysms because they cannot
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VIII
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    • social contact with other human beings. In everyday physical existence
    • we purchase our social life at the price of listening right through
    • were otherwise we could never in this physical life become social beings
    • are capable of informing our scientific and social life.



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