5 found
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  1.  17
    On the Laws of Physical and Human Nature: Hobbes' Physical and Social Cosmologies.Michel Verdon - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (4):653.
  2.  20
    Boas and holism: A textual analysis.Michel Verdon - 2006 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 36 (3):276-302.
    Some anthropologists advocate going back to Boas’s anthropology to retrieve his sense of the individual and agency, among other things. Such a "psycho-logical Boas" could only exist in his holistic works. Elsewhere, I argued in a very synthetic way that Boas’s ethnography was not holistic. Here, I move a step further; perusing the very texts that famous commentators have singled out to prove Boas’s holism, I discover no holism; I find history as mere movement in space, and no individual agents; (...)
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  3.  31
    Durkheim and Aristotle: Of Some Incongruous Congruences.Michel Verdon - 1982 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 13 (4):333.
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  4.  20
    Midwife or toad? Philosophy and the social sciences.Michel Verdon - 1985 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 15 (1):53-63.
  5.  29
    “The Superorganic,” or Kroeber’s Hidden Agenda.Michel Verdon - 2010 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 40 (3):375-398.
    Kroeber’s "The Superorganic" (1917) stands as the first extreme statement of cultural holism. Some have compared it to Durkheim, the majority to Boas; some have denied any evolutionary message, others read in it a theory of "emergent evolution" arising from his transcendental holism. What was it, exactly? When understood as part of a trilogy comprising two other articles (one from 1915, the other from 1919), it emerged that his extreme brand of cultural holism was a necessary tool to carry out (...)
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