Relationship between History and Sociology:
Weber viewed sociology as a "service" to history, seeking to provide
clear concepts for the causal analysis of historical phenomena. He
rejected both the positivist view of "general laws" and the
subjectivist view of "idiosyncratic events," choosing instead a
middle ground where sociology formulates type concepts while
history explains individual actions and structures of cultural
significance.
Verstehen (Understanding):
Weber’s best-known methodological contribution is verstehen, a
rational procedure for understanding the "meaning" and motives
behind social action. Unlike mere intuition, it involves systematic
and rigorous research into the subjective states of actors or large-
scale cultural units.
Causality and "Adequate Causality":
Weber defined causality as the probability that an event will be
accompanied by another. He advocated for multicausal approaches,
ranking various factors by significance rather than searching for a
single causal agent. His concept of "adequate causality" suggests
that sociologists can only make probabilistic statements (if x occurs,
y is probable).
, Ideal Types:
These are heuristic tools—described as "measuring rods" or
"yardsticks"—constructed by social scientists to capture the
essential features of social phenomena. They are one-sided
exaggerations of reality used for comparison with empirical data to
identify divergences and their causes. Weber identified several
varieties: historical, general sociological, action, and structural ideal
types.
Values and Value-Freedom:
Weber argued that teachers must keep personal values out of the
classroom, as the lecture hall should remain separate from the
arena of public discussion. In research, he differentiated between
value-relevance (using values to select what to study) and the
collection of data, which must remain objective and separate from
personal evaluations.