Inner-worldly asceticism

Inner-worldly asceticism was characterized by Max Weber in Economy and Society as the concentration of human behavior upon activities leading to salvation within the context of the everyday world.[1]

He saw it as a prime influence in the emergence of modernity and the technological world,[2] a point developed in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.

  1. ^ G. R. Elton, Reformation Europe (1969) p. 278
  2. ^ John O'Neill, Sociology as a Skin Trade (1972) p. 14 and p. 60

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