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Weber
German sociologist and political economist. Son of a wealthy liberal politician and a Calvinist mother, Weber was a compulsively diligent scholar who suffered occasional nervous collapses. Insights derived from his own experience inform his most famous and controversial work, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1904-5), which examines the relationship between Calvinist (or Puritan) morality, compulsive labor, bureaucracy, and economic success under capitalism (see Protestant ethic). Weber also wrote penetratingly on social phenomena such as charisma and mysticism, which he saw as antithetical to the modern world and its underlying process of rationalization. His efforts helped establish sociology as an academic discipline in Germany, and his work continues to stimulate scholarship. Through his insistence on the need for objectivity and his analysis of human action in terms of motivation, he profoundly influenced sociological theory. His voluminous writings, mostly published posthumously, include Economy and Society (2 vols., 1922-25) and General Economic History (1923).
German composer. Son of a musician and theater manager, and first cousin to W. A. Mozart's wife, he was born with a deformed hip and was never strong. He had composition lessons with Michael Haydn (1737-1806) and with Abbé Vogler (1749-1814), who recommended him for a post in Breslau (1804-6). His operas began to have success, and took over direction of the Prague Opera (1813-16), which he saved from ruin, but finding little time for composition, he resigned. Showing signs of the tuberculosis that would kill him, he began to compose more prolifically. Appointed kapellmeister for life in Dresden, he began work on his masterpiece, Der Freischü tz (1821), whose premiere made him an international star. The libretto for his next opera, Euryanthe (1823), was so bad that its admirable music never succeeded, and his final opera, Oberon (1826), composed for London, was a success there but not elsewhere. He died in England at 39.
weed
Any plant growing where it is not wanted. On land under cultivation, weeds compete with crops for water, light, and nutrients. On rangelands and in pastures, weeds are those plants that grazing animals dislike or that are poisonous. Many weeds are hosts of plant disease organisms or of insect pests. Some originally unwanted plants later were found to have virtues and came under cultivation, while some cultivated plants, when transplanted to new climates, escaped cultivation and became weeds in the new habitat.
Top words beginning with W: whirken, wicked, whitelivered, wabeno, wang, wenchers, westernizes, wantonnesses, waveoff, wellsite, warison, wingover, wauble, warbled, whatnot, watchcry, waspishly, waitpid, wauregan, winterweed
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