Reviews
Haskell provides a deeper understanding of the relationship between professional societies and authoritative knowledge and how this led to the rise of distinctive intellectual societies.
A number of helpful works have been written about the early history of the social sciences in the United States... but none has contributed more than Haskell's book... to our effort to understand the origins, the sustaining conditions, and the early consequences of professional social science in America.
A venturesome reassessment of the intellectual 'revolution' that took place around the end of the nineteenth century and laid the foundations of modern social thought... A major contribution to the intellectual history of the late nineteenth century.
A very valuable book, not only for the gap it fills in the study of the emergence and professionalization of the social science disciplines, but also for its interpretation of the origins and distinguishing features of modern social thought... This book will command the attention and respect of scholars for a very long time.