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Laws are important and valuable in the exact natural sciences, in the measure that those sciences are universally valid.
Max Weber
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Max Weber
Age: 56 †
Born: 1864
Born: April 21
Died: 1920
Died: June 14
Anthropologist
Economist
Historian
Jurist
Lawyer
Musicologist
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Politician
Sociologist
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Maximilian Carl Emil Weber
Karl Emil Maximilian Weber
Max Vemper
Maks Veber
Makesi Weibo
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Maximilian Karl Emil Weber
Sciences
Exact
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Valuable
Laws
Law
Natural
Universally
Important
Valid
More quotes by Max Weber
Politics is a strong and slow boring of hard boards.
Max Weber
Daily and hourly, the politician inwardly has to overcome a quite trivial and all-too-human enemy: a quite vulgar vanity.
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The career of politics grants a feeling of power. The knowledge of influencing men, of participating in power over them, and above all, the feeling of holding in one's hands a nerve fiber of historically important events can elevate the professional politician above everyday routine even when he is placed in formally modest positions.
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No sociologist should think himself too good, even in his old age, to make tens of thousands of quite trivial computations in his head and perhaps for months at a time.
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Only by strict specialization can the scientific worker become fully conscious, for once and perhaps never again in his lifetime, that he has achieved something that will endure. A really definitive and good accomplishment is today always a specialized act.
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Charisma is the gift from above where a leader knows from inside himself what to do.
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A government is an institution that holds a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence.
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Whenever known and sufficient causes are available, it is anti-scientific to discard them in favour of a hypothesis that can never be verified.
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In a democracy the people choose a leader in whom they trust. Then the chosen leader says, 'Now shut up and obey me.' People and party are then no longer free to interfere in his business.
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Puritanism carried the ethos of the rational organization of capital and labor. It took over from the Jewish ethic only what was adapted to this purpose.
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Those human groups that entertain a subjective belief in their common descent because of similarities of physical type or of customs or both, or because of memories of colonization and migration this belief must be important for group formation furthermore it does not matter whether an objective blood relationship exists.
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[In] the realm of science, ... what we have achieved will be obsolete in ten, twenty or fifty years. That is the fate, indeed, that is the very meaning of scientific work. ... Every scientific fulfillment raises new questions and cries out to be surpassed rendered obsolete. Everyone who wishes to serve science has to resign himself to this
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All knowledge of cultural reality, as may be seen, is always knowledge from particular points of view.
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It is not true that good can follow only from good and evil only from evil, but that often the opposite is true.
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The decisive means for politics is violence.
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Either one lives for politics or one lives off politics.
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Certainly all historical experience confirms the truth - that man would not have attained the possible unless time and again he had reached out for the impossible.
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All the analysis of infinite reality which the finite human mind can conduct rests on the tacit assumption that only a finite portion of this reality constitutes the object of scientific investigation, and that only it is 'important' in the sense of being 'worthy of being known.
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Causal analysis provides absolutely no value judgment, and a value judgment is absolutely not a causal explanation.
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However many people complain about the red tape, it would be sheer illusion to think ... continuous administrative work can be carried out in any field except by means of officials working in offices.... The choice is only that between bureaucracy and dillettantism.
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