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11 - Max Weber as legal historian

from PART IV - LAW AND ECONOMICS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2012

Stephen Turner
Affiliation:
University of South Florida
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Summary

Max Weber was initially trained in both law and history and he drew extensively on examples from legal history in constructing his later sociological works. Yet he was not, properly speaking, a legal historian. In fact, as we shall show, the superimposition upon legal history of his sociological categories of “ideal types” of legal authority resulted in serious distortions at the same time that it led to some important insights. His sharp separation of “fact” from “value,” and his relegation of law to the realm of “fact,” led him to overlook entirely the importance of legal values in two of his best known socio-historical studies, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism and The City. In the background of his entire sociology of law was an oversimplified historiography in which the history of law in the West was viewed as a progression from a “feudal,” “traditional,” “personal” type to a “capitalist,” “formal-rational,” and “bureaucratic” type, with the prospect of an emerging “socialist,” “substantively rational” type.

Weber's background in the law

Max Weber was born into a family that “was steeped in the intellectual culture of the law.” His father was a lawyer as well as a politician, who served as a member of the National Liberal Party in the German Reichstag from 1872 to 1884. The son pursued a legal education from the time he first matriculated at Heidelberg University in 1882, where, in his first semester, he enrolled in a course entitled Roman Law: Pandects and Institutes. He later continued his law studies at the University of Berlin, under the tutelage of some of the leading lights of the late nineteenth-century German legal academy.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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