The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002.
Weber, Max
(VAY-buhr) A German sociologist of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Weber maintained that modern capitalist society is created when technical advances require administration by a bureaucracy. Disagreeing with Karl Marx, Weber argued against the inevitability of revolution by the proletariat and the triumph of socialism, maintaining that social and political ideology can act independently of economic and material conditions. He also wrote extensively on the Protestant work ethic. Webers research methods established the foundations of social science research, as distinct from the natural sciences.