| Albion W. Small, Ellsworth Faris, Ernest Watson Burgess - 1915 - 900 páginas
...co-operate in prescribed ways at a certain juncture. The structure holds the concept and furnishes the instrumentalities for bringing it into the world of...and action in a way to serve the interests of men in society."1 The point is that an institution is a section of corporate human nature plus the machinery... | |
| Leon Carroll Marshall - 1918 - 1130 páginas
...generations, but it will appear as a resultant of all the vicissitudes of the folkways in the interval. Institutions and laws are produced out of mores. An...the interests of men in society. Institutions are crescive or enacted. They are crescive when they take shape in the mores, growing by the instinctive... | |
| Carson Samuel Duncan - 1920 - 526 páginas
...concept (idea, notion, doctrine, interest) and a structure. The structure is a framework or apparatus, set to cooperate in prescribed ways at a certain conjuncture....in a way to serve the interests of men in society. ' ' 1 That is, there are certain types of organization or certain institutions through which men work... | |
| Carson Samuel Duncan - 1920 - 524 páginas
...concept (idea, notion, doctrine, interest) and a structure. The structure is a framework or apparatus, set to cooperate in prescribed ways at a certain conjuncture....and action in a way to serve the interests of men in society."1 That is, there are certain types of organization or certain institutions through which men... | |
| Clarence Marsh Case - 1924 - 1026 páginas
...generalizations as to societal welfare which are suggested by them, and inherent in them, as they grow. . . . The mores and institutions. Institutions and laws...in the mores, growing by the instinctive efforts by o SOCIAL EVOLUTION which the mores are produced. Then the efforts, through long use, become definite... | |
| Albert Galloway Keller - 1925 - 202 páginas
...be only a number of functionaries set to cooperate in prescribed ways under certain circumstances. " The structure holds the concept and furnishes instrumentalities...in a way to serve the interests of men in society." And now we must drop institutions for the time, to return to them when we have followed up the process... | |
| Charles Abram Ellwood - 1925 - 522 páginas
...Chap. IV. Sumner says (Folkways, p. 53) : "An institution consists of a concept and a stricture. . . . The structure holds the concept and furnishes instrumentalities...in a way to serve the interests of men in society." " This is, of course, the chief reason why the concepts of "institution" and "the institutional" cannot... | |
| William Graham Sumner, Albert Galloway Keller, Maurice Rea Davie - 1927 - 778 páginas
...lives of all more complete."2s0 This is the function of institutions, among them that of government. "An institution consists of a concept (idea, notion,...and action in a way to serve the interests of men in society."2«1 In civilized societies the "concept" referred to is generally interpreted as an abstract... | |
| Frederick Albert Cleveland - 1927 - 528 páginas
...sense that this term is used by Sumner (when he says institutions and laws are products out of mores) "consists of a concept (idea, notion, doctrine, interest)...the world of facts and action in a way to serve the interest of men in society. . . . They began in folkways. They became customs. They developed into... | |
| Charles Robert McCann - 2004 - 258 páginas
...cooperate in prescribed ways at a certain conjuncture." Its significance arises from the reality that it "holds the concept and furnishes instrumentalities...in a way to serve the interests of men in society" (pp. 53^-). As mores began in custom and folkways, so institutions begin with the mores being refined... | |
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