"Wallerstein 000004" sayfasının sürümleri arasındaki fark
Gezinti kısmına atla
Arama kısmına atla
("{| border="1" |- |the traditional liberal theoretical analysis of modernity broke modern life down into three spheres — the economic, the political, and the..." içeriğiyle yeni sayfa oluşturdu) |
k |
||
| 1. satır: | 1. satır: | ||
{| border="1" | {| border="1" | ||
|- | |- | ||
| − | |the traditional liberal theoretical analysis of modernity broke modern life down into three spheres — the economic, the political, and the sociocultural. This was reflected in the creation of three separate social science | + | |the traditional [[liberal]] [[theoretical]] [[analysis]] of [[modernity]] broke [[modern]] [[life]] down into three spheres — the [[economic]], the [[political]], and the [[sociocultural]]. This was reflected in the creation of three separate [[social science]] [[discipline]]s dealing with the [[modern]] [[world]]: [[economics]], concerned with the [[market]]; [[political science]], concerned with the [[state]]; and [[sociology]], concerned with everything else (sometimes called the [[civil society]]).<ref>{{:RefWallerstein001}} s.xxii</ref> |
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
05.48, 27 Ekim 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli
| the traditional liberal theoretical analysis of modernity broke modern life down into three spheres — the economic, the political, and the sociocultural. This was reflected in the creation of three separate social science disciplines dealing with the modern world: economics, concerned with the market; political science, concerned with the state; and sociology, concerned with everything else (sometimes called the civil society).[1] |
- ↑ Wallerstein, Immanuel (2011). The Modern World-System I. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University od California Press. s.xxii