Life and the Student -

Life and the Student

Roadside Notes on Human Nature, Society, and Letters

Charles Horton Cooley (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
164 Seiten
2017
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-138-52722-5 (ISBN)
168,35 inkl. MwSt
Life and the Student (1927), with a new introduction by Jonathan B. Imber, is a compilation of reflections, commentaries, and letters from other scholars that Charles Horton Cooley, accumulated throughout his life. The book includes personal passages on various topics within the realms of reading and writing, thinking, art, science, sociology, academia, religion, and human nature.

There is no formal structure to the book, except the literary sense that organizes these thoughts and observations about life. It is impossible to categorize these widely ranging commentaries. They include discussions of the automobile, the impressionable nature of young people, the claim that the question of racial superiority is still unresolved, his belief that eugenists are inconsistent in their views, and more.

Cooley's work sought to emphasize the connection between society and the individual. He believed that the two could only be understood in relationship to each other. While researching the effects of social responses and social participation, he created the concept of the "looking-glass self," which is the theory that a person's sense of self grows out of interpersonal interactions and the perceptions of others. Cooley also showed that social life and the relationship between groups and communities stems from mental phenomena.

Carl Friedrich

INTRODUCTION: THE VOCATION OF CHARLES HORTON COOLEY
by Jonathan B. Imber

PART ONE

OUR TIME

Automobiles � Strategy of the Youth Movement � Confusion and
Continuity � Shaky Bridges � "Our Complex Life" � Radicalism
and Reaction � The Conservatism of Intelligence � Education and
Religion � Nationality � American Patriotism � Traits of Democracy
� Immigrants � Americanization � Race � Anti-Semitism �
Eugenists � Team-Work � Social Mechanics � Classes and Culture
� The Upper Class � Class Magazines � The Handworking Classes
� Class-Conflict �Rural Physiognomy � Progress?

PART TWO

READING AND WRITING

Books and Persons � Character � The Book and the Sentence � Form
� Freedom in Books � Diary Books � Literary Selves � Egotism �
Selves and Bodies � Struggle � Tranquillity � Jealousy � Criticism �
Self-Criticism � Residual Satisfactions � Magazines � Goethe � Dante
� Pascal � Bacon � Montesquieu and de Tocqueville � La Bruyere
� Samuel Butler � Quiet in Books � Thoreau � Thomas a Kempis

PART THREE

THINKING

Originality � System and Spontaneity � How to Grow Ideas � Dried
Truth � Motives � Milieu � Controversy. � The Subservience of
Contradiction � Notes from Practice � Children's Philosophy

PART FOUR

ART, SCIENCE AND SOCIOLOGY

Building � The Glamour of Art � The Artist's Public � Heritage � Art
and Conduct � An Art of Society? � Art and Science � The Fallibility
of Scientific Groups � Skirmishes on the Border � Pseudo-Science
� Perception � Diagrams and Statistics � Traits of Sociology � Two
Ways of Organizing Life � The Organization of Freedom � "Heredity
or Environment."

PART FIVE

ACADEMIC

A Soft Job � An Art? � The Day's Work � The Eloquent Man � Formalism
� Heritage and Spontaneity � The Passing Current � The
Chair � American Universities � The Campus � Scholars and Administrators
� Genius on the Faculty � Academic Freedom � The
Academic Outlook � Outing

PART SIX

HUMAN NATURE

Is Human Nature Selfish � Self-Expression � The Looking-Glass Self
� Possessions � The Material "I" � On a Remark of Dr. Holmes � On
Certain Sentiments � The "Gregarious Instinct " � Plans � Anticipation
� The End of the World � The Transitive Attitude � Posthumous
Fame � Might and Right � Prudence � Worry � Distraction � Mental
Management � Compensation

PART SEVEN

LARGER LIFE

Faith � The Mind of the Soldier � The Lot of the Individual � As to
the Shortness of Life � Evolution � Expansion � Solidarity � Perplexity
� The Incredibility of Institutions � Past, Present and Future �
Ideas about God � God and Oneself � Seeking God � Another Life?
� Varieties of Idealism � Can Christianity Survive? � The Golden
Rule � Group Sins � Social Religion � Christianity and Class � The
Church � Salvation

INDEX

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 453 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-138-52722-X / 113852722X
ISBN-13 978-1-138-52722-5 / 9781138527225
Zustand Neuware
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