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Émile Durkheim - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Emile Durkheim is considered by many to be the father of sociology. During his lifetime, he published an impressive number studies on subjects such as religion, suicide, and all aspects of society. ... Emile Durkheim is considered by many to be the father of sociology. He is credited with making sociology a science,
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The latter two-thirds of the full-text of Durkheim's 1924 series of lectures which forms the basis for the development of a genuinely modern sociology ... Emile Durkheim (1914)
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Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) is by far one of the most important and prolific sociologists in the history of the field. Durkheim himself is credited with ...
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Suicide, Durkheim's third major work, is of great importance because it is his first serious effort to establish an empericism in sociology, an empiricism that would provide a sociological explanation for a phenomenon traditionally regarded as exclusively psychological and individualistic.
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Emile Durkheim was the first French academic sociologist. His life was dominated throughout by his academic career, even though he was intensely and passionately involved in the affairs of French society at large.
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The Sociology of Emile Durkheim ... ; Durkheim's Major Works ... Macrosociology: The Study of Sociocultural Systems contains an essay on Emile Durkheim...
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EMILE DURKHEIM On the Division of Labor in Society. ... To explain how the DOL contributes to feelings of solidarity, Durkheim (DH) uses the simple example of a married couple. He claims that if the DOL between the sexes were reduced to a certain point, material life would disappear, only to leave behind sexual relationships.
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Outline of Lecture on Durkheim:; CHRONOLOGY OF DAVID EMILE DURKHEIM'S LIFE; BORN APRIL 15, 1858 AT EPINAL, VOSGE, LORRAINE, FRANCE, SON OF A RABBI; 1874-5 GRANTED BACCALAUREATE (EG, HIS DIPLOMA); 1879 ADMITTED TO STUDY IN THE ECOLE NORMALE SUPERIEURE (3rd TRY AT AGE 21);
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This quote exemplifies the stance Durkheim took toward crime. He recognized deviance as important to the well-being of society and proposed that challenges to established moral and legal laws (deviance and crime, respectively) acted to unify those that were not in opposition to the laws.
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