| Theda Skocpol - 1984 - 430 頁
...which institutional forms persist, and under which conditions do the various other forces pervail? Since "different structures and types display different degrees of ability to survive," as Schumpeter himself notes, 89 which patterns have a greater and which a lesser degree of this ability?... | |
| Yūichi Shionoya, Mark Perlman - 1994 - 152 頁
...appreciating their implications, would not have taken the simplistic position involved in denying them a role. Social structures, types and attitudes are coins that...structures and types display different degrees of this ability to survive, we almost always find that actual group and national behaviour more or less... | |
| Reinhard Bendix - 486 頁
...stance, as it derived from his twin belief that Schumpeter had been correct in his observation that "social structures, types and attitudes are coins that do not readily melt'' and that "societies are always in transition from past to future." The analytic approaches that made... | |
| Anthony W. Marx - 1998 - 420 頁
...so constructed, whites cannot easily dismantle this awful creation. As Joseph Schumpeter observed, "Social structures, types and attitudes are coins...that do not readily melt. Once they are formed they persist."1 Unmaking racial domination does not unmake the prejudice upon which domination was built... | |
| Andrei S. Markovits, Steven L. Hellerman - 2014 - 384 頁
...Schumpeter also emphasizes the stickiness of institutions in explaining the complexity of social change: "Social structures, types and attitudes are coins...are formed they persist, possibly for centuries." 19 While institutions in general are sticky, change of, in, and by them is further slowed by the stickiness... | |
| Stephen Ackroyd, Steve Fleetwood - 2000 - 298 頁
...fascination with the local, contingent and indeterminate. Schumpeter's (1974: 12—130) warning that social structures, types and attitudes are coins that...they are formed, they persist, possibly for centuries ... things economic and social move by their own momentum and the ensuing situations compel individuals... | |
| International Schumpeter Society. Meeting, Dennis C. Mueller, Uwe Cantner - 2001 - 386 頁
...rule the living' (Schumpeter in Swedberg, 1991b, p. 183 and p. 214). and finally, to maintain that 'Social structures, types and attitudes are coins that do not readily melt' (Schumpeter, 1987, p. 12). Schumpeter had no clinical break between feudalism and capitalism, no complete... | |
| Sabina Alkire - 2005 - 356 頁
...demonstrate. 135 (1992fl: 108); see also 'Description as Choice' (in 1982t). Participation and Culture Social structures, types, and attitudes are coins...structures and types display different degrees of this ability to survive, we almost always find that actual group and national behavior more or less... | |
| Sabina Alkire - 2002 - 358 頁
...demonstrate. 13S (1992* 108): sec also 'Description as Choice' (in 19826). Participation and Culture Soeial structures, types, and attitudes are coins that do...structures and types display different degrees of this ability to survive, we ahnost always find that actual group and national hehavior more or less... | |
| David A. Reisman - 2004 - 306 頁
...backward in order to look forward. He did this because, empirically speaking, the past had not gone away: 'Social structures, types and attitudes are coins...are formed they persist, possibly for centuries.' (Schumpeter, 1942a:12). Free people freely choose their bestjudged course of action. They make their... | |
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