Question:

Max Weber and humanness?

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How does Max Weber define humanness with his theory of bureaucracy? Does it have anything to do with behaviour of people in groups??

Also, how does the theory of bureaucracy relate to modern society?

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  1. These big guys from the past like Max show they did not miss the pressures we have. They still exhibited the social weakness of man... stress and strife socially and mentally. Max didn't get past 1920 so he has missed Internet p**n and terrorism of our protected civilized political state. Max went crazy for a while too and was able to love one cousin and married another. His unreal expectations for love and life were from his moral social concepts . He hated his father for abusing his mom. In fact the last fight sent his dad to the grave.  He saw nationalism rise and socialism explode on top of the life of kings and queens and Czarist feudalism.   Max decided the social state would eventually bury social freedom in giant bureaucracy. In world War I he spoke against the nasty killer submarines .  Modern society uses his view that legal social control is good for the leaders and the followers alike. Leaders are restricted to the law. Social change can develop legally. Max Weber saw all life coming to in a giant web. Our web is formed from the cradle to the grave in behavior and moral concepts. Mental illness is present today as it was then. Moralist concepts become rooted in the minds of intellectuals as they stake out their territory. Max would have done well today. He would have changed his ideas little to fit our modern society.

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