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Document Details :

Title: The Ordinary and the Extraordinary.
Subtitle: The 'Religious' Imprint of Weber's Concept of Rationalization
Author(s): BRAECKMAN, A.
Journal: Bijdragen
Volume: 65    Issue: 3   Date: 2004-07-01   
Pages: 283-302
DOI: 10.2143/BIJ.65.3.504970

Abstract :
Weber’s concept of rationalization internally relies on an opposition that is borrowed from a religious semantics: the opposition between the extraordinary and the ordinary. Taking as point of departure the expression ‘the disenchantment of the world’ I argue that this expression, and the concept of rationalization, which is connected with it, have to be understood as elements of a categorical field of tension that is dominated precisely by the mentioned opposition. Referring to the sociology of religion, in which Weber for the first time developed and deployed this opposition as an analytical tool, it appears that 1) the concept of rationalization in Weber is multivocal; 2) that the extraordinary and the ordinary relate to one another as do charisma and institution; and finally 3) that the description of the western rationalization process in terms of ‘disenchantment of the world’ by no means signifies that modern society is no longer characterized by the relationship between the extraordinary and the ordinary. Weber, for that matter, indeed attaches great importance to the extraordinary as a factor of revolutionary change, both in modern history and in modern politics.