一九二三年以前の「社会科学」という言葉

書誌事項

タイトル別名
  • The Concept of “Social Sciences” prior to 192
  • 一九二三年以前の「社会科学」という言葉--日本社会学史と大杉栄を中心に
  • 1923ネン イゼン ノ シャカイ カガク ト イウ コトバ ニホン シャカイガクシ ト オオスギ サカエ オ チュウシン ニ
  • 日本社会学史と大杉栄を中心に
  • With Special Attention to the History of Sociology and Sakae Osugi

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抄録

The aim of this paper is to consider the concept of “Shakai Kagaku (Social Sciences)” prior to 1923. Yasutaka Ichinokawa examines the concept of “The Social” in his book Shakai (The Social) (2006). He insists that (1) the phrase “Shakai Kagaku” was not popular in Japan before 1923, and (2) this phrase was used to mean the bundling of sociology, law, politics, economics, and so on, only after 1923, in keeping with the use of such terminology in Marxism. In this paper, Ichinokawa’s claims are examined by looking at the history of sociology and the concept of “Shakai Kagaku” in the writings of Sakae Osugi, an anarchist in the Taisho era. An examination of the above revealed the following: First, in the Taisho era, a distinction was not made between “Shakai Kagaku” and “Shakaigaku (sociology).” In so-called synthetic sociology, “Shakaigaku” meant the highest conception of the social sciences. In the history of sociology, in pre-1923 Japan, “Shakai Kagaku” was a phrase which occupied a position critical to synthetic sociology. Second, under the influence of anarchists such as P. Kropotkin and M. Bakounine, Osugi’s concept of “Shakai Kagaku” had been used to criticize the sciences prior to 1923. Moreover, their movements influenced Shinjinkai (an association antecedent to the Social Science Society). However, little light was shed on their attempts because their movements were suppressed.

収録刊行物

  • ソシオロジ

    ソシオロジ 52 (3), 3-18,218, 2008

    社会学研究会

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