Abstract

The monumental though fragmentary work of German sociologist and economist Max Weber (1864–1920) is focused on the quest for the particularity of modern Western civilization. Its vanishing point is the uniqueness of modern “rational capitalism” with its preconditions in, and repercussions on, all aspects of social life. Weber, however, did not develop a theory of the modern world; he embarked rather on its prerequisites in classical antiquity and the middle ages and on crosscultural comparisons with the great civilizations of the Oriental world. That was partly because of his scholarly education; he started his career with works on the interdependence of legal and economic structures in late medieval Italy and ancient Rome. But it was also because of his growing insight that the structural preconditions that enabled the development of a capitalistic culture in the Occidental world and hampered it in the Oriental world could be adequately analyzed only from a point of view of universal history. The more Weber developed his comparative approach, the more significant became the implications of diverse types of citizenship in the West and the absence of a notion of citizenship in the East. He had already covered certain aspects of this subject in his article “Agrarverhaltnisse im Altertum” for the encyclopedia Handworterbuch der Staatswissen-schaften , which in its final version (1909) became a text of book length.

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