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  1. Lundberg was born in Fairdale, North Dakota. His parents, Andrew J. Lundberg and Britta C. Erickson, were immigrants from Sweden. Lundberg received his bachelor's degree from the University of North Dakota in 1920, a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1922, and a doctorate in 1925 from the University of Minnesota, [2] where he ...

  2. George Lundberg, the thirty-third president of the American Sociological Association died in Seattle April 14, 1966, following surgical treatment of a condition not ordinarily considered dangerous. Lundberg was born in Fairdale, North Dakota, of Swedish immigrant parents, and had his first eight years of education in a one-room school house.

  3. 1 day ago · Search for: 'George A. Lundberg' in Oxford Reference ». (1895–1966)An influential American sociologist, vigorous proponent of a neo-positivist approach to the study of social behaviour, most notably in his books Foundations of Sociology (1939) and Can Science Save Us? (1947). Lundberg argued that, for sociology to be a science, it must model ...

  4. George Andrew Lundberg (1895–1966) was a vigorous and influential advocate of the pursuit of sociological knowledge by the method of natural science. Much of his writing was devoted to stating and clarifying the postulates of scientific thought, the fundamental attributes of objective research, and the applicability of such principles to ...

  5. on the career of the late George A. Lundberg, notes that tell us something of how this man developed his sociological interests and his professional style. George Lundberg's encounters with sociology-indeed, his en­ counters with all of life-were vigorous, searching, sensitive, in­ telligent, and highly productive of wit and wisdom.

  6. Lundberg, George A. (1895–1966) An influential American sociologist, vigorous proponent of a neo-positivist approach to the study of social behaviour, most notably in his books Foundations of Sociology (1939) and Can Science Save Us? (1947). Lundberg argued that, for sociology to be a science, it must model its theories and methods on those ...

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  8. GEORGE A. LUNDBERG AND MARGARET LAWSING* Bennington College HE EXPLANATION of social groupings and their behavior as groups is generally regarded as the basic problem of sociology. Accordingly, any comprehensive social theory must provide a logically consistent description of this phenomenon. All systematic thinkers on the subject have

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