Max Weber is widely regarded as the most important and  influential figure in the history of the social sciences. Among  other things, he wrote extensively on the methodology of the social  sciences, but his writings on methodology are complex and are the  subject of many conflicting interpretations.
  
  
  
  In this authoritative new book, Sven Eliaeson provides a  comprehensive introduction to Weber's methodology and to the  various ways it has been interpreted by subsequent scholars in  Europe and the United States. Eliaeson shows how the vested  interests of scholars have resulted in biased interpretations of  Weber's work. Weber was preoccupied with the intellectual problems  of his time and not with our current disciplinary crises. By  placing Weber's thought and methodology in its historical context,  Eliaeson is able to provide a masterly reconstruction of his  central concerns while at the same time exploring the enduring  relevance of Weber's work for sociology today.
  
  
  
  This book will be recognized as a definitive work on Weber's  methodology and will be an indispensable text for students and  scholars in sociology and the social sciences.