
Anmerkungen zur Transkription
This work opens with a careful look at what it means to call sociology a science at all. It maps the tangled landscape of early‑20th‑century debates, pointing out how scholars clash over the discipline’s boundaries and its very purpose. By gathering a variety of unsettled problems, it offers a provisional framework that invites listeners to see where the study of society might begin.
From there, the author turns to the uneasy dance between the individual and the collective. He questions whether “society” is merely a convenient abstraction or a concrete object worthy of systematic inquiry, arguing that every human action ultimately unfolds within a social context. The prose is thoughtful and precise, guiding the audience through philosophical reflections that still resonate with anyone curious about how personal experience and communal life intertwine.
Language
de
Duration
~3 hours (190K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Peter Becker, Reiner Ruf, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This transcription was produced from images generously made available by Bayerische Staatsbibliothek / Bavarian State Library.)
Release date
2019-06-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1858–1918
A sharp observer of modern city life, money, fashion, and the subtle patterns of everyday social interaction, this German thinker helped shape sociology as a distinct field. His essays remain strikingly fresh because they turn ordinary experiences into big questions about freedom, individuality, and modern life.
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