Explorations

Future Paths of Phenomenology

1st OPHEN Summer Meeting

Repository | Series | Book | Chapter

181525

Criticism of Znaniecki's sociology and the decline of social inquiry

Z. Jordan

pp. 230-249

Abstract

If Alexander the Great really cut the Gordian knot, observed Felix Kaufmann, this might have been the cause of the relations between Aristotle and his former pupil becoming strained in later years. For there is nothing less congenial to the scientific way of thought than to dispose of a theoretical difficulty by an arbitrary action instead of undertaking its solution by the accepted rules of procedure.

Publication details

Published in:

Jordan Z. (1963) Philosophy and ideology: the development of philosophy and Marxism-Leninism in Poland since the second world war. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 230-249

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-3636-8_15

Full citation:

Jordan Z. (1963) Criticism of Znaniecki's sociology and the decline of social inquiry, In: Philosophy and ideology, Dordrecht, Springer, 230–249.