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29 Apr 2021 03:30:23 UTC
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Author: Emile Durkheim<br />File Type: pdf<br />font face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxThis edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2009.spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxTo purchase your own copy of this or any ofspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxTaylor & Francis or Routledges collection of thousands of eBooksspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxTranslated from the Frenchspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxDE QUELQUES FORMES PRIMITIVES DE CLASSIFICATIONspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxAnnee Sociologique 19012 (1903)spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxFirst published in English 1963spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxby Cohen & West Limitedspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxBroadway House, 6874 Carter Lanespanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxLondon, E.C.4spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxSecond edition 1969spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12px Rodney Needham 1963spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxNo part of this book may be reproducedspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxin any form without permission fromspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxthe publisher, except for the quotationspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxof brief passages in criticismspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxISBN 0-203-09282-1 Master e-book ISBNspanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxISBN 0 7100 3362 1 (c)spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxISBN 0 7100 6891 3 (p)spanfontfont face=Noto Sans [unknown], serifspan 12pxIn this influential wospanfontspan 12pxrk, first published in English in 1963, Durkheim and Mauss claim that the individual mind is capable of classification and they seek the origin of the classificatory function in society. On the basis of an intensive examination of forms and principles of symbolic classification reported from the Australian aborigines, the Zuni and traditional China, they try to establish a formal correspondence between social and symbolic classification. From this they argue that the mode of classification is determined by the form of society and that the notions of space, time, hierarchy, number, class and other such cognitive categories are products of societyspanp Noto Sans [unknown], serif 12px
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