vocation$90710$ - meaning and definition. What is vocation$90710$
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What (who) is vocation$90710$ - definition

TEXT OF A LECTURE GIVEN IN 1918 BY MAX WEBER
Science as a Vocation (book); Science as a vocation
  • Max Weber - Wissenschaft als Beruf - Seite

Vocation         
OCCUPATION TO WHICH A PERSON IS SPECIALLY DRAWN OR FOR WHICH THEY ARE SUITED, TRAINED, OR QUALIFIED
Vocational; Vocations; Ecclesiastical and Religious Vocation; Vocation, Ecclesiastical and Religious
A vocation (Richard A. Muller, Dictionary of Latin and Greek Theological Terms: Drawn Principally from Protestant Scholastic Theology (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House Company, 1985), s.
vocational         
OCCUPATION TO WHICH A PERSON IS SPECIALLY DRAWN OR FOR WHICH THEY ARE SUITED, TRAINED, OR QUALIFIED
Vocational; Vocations; Ecclesiastical and Religious Vocation; Vocation, Ecclesiastical and Religious
Vocational training and skills are the training and skills needed for a particular job or profession.
...a course designed to provide vocational training in engineering...
ADJ: usu ADJ n
vocationally
...a variety of vocationally oriented courses.
ADV: ADV -ed/adj
vocation         
OCCUPATION TO WHICH A PERSON IS SPECIALLY DRAWN OR FOR WHICH THEY ARE SUITED, TRAINED, OR QUALIFIED
Vocational; Vocations; Ecclesiastical and Religious Vocation; Vocation, Ecclesiastical and Religious
n. to have missed one's vocation ('not to have chosen an occupation or vocation at which one is particularly adept')

Wikipedia

Science as a Vocation

Science as a Vocation (German: Wissenschaft als Beruf) is the text of a lecture given in 1917 at Munich University by German sociologist and political economist Max Weber. The original version was published in German, but at least two translations in English exist. Science as a Vocation is the first of the two "Vocation" lectures Weber delivered. The second lecture was "Politics as a Vocation" which was delivered in January 1919, also in Munich.