Durkheim's study of socialism is a document of excep- tional intellectual interest for several reasons. Not the least of these is that it presents us with the now somewhat un- usual case of a truly first-rate thinker who had the inclina- tion to contribute to the history of sociological theory and to comment extensively on the work of a key figure in that history, Henri Saint-Simon. The core of this volume con- I tains Durkheim's presentation of Saint-Simon's ideas, their sources and their development. Indeed, Durkheim so subordinates himself in these pages that we might well wish that he had developed his own critical reactions to Saint-Simon at greater length. This is somewhat unusual in the annals of current sociological schol- arship in America, which has tended to leave "mere" exe- gesis and historical commentary to text book writers, and which sometimes unwittingly fosters the barbaric assumption that books and ideas more than twenty years old are beyond scientific salvation. In contrast to such current preoccupa- tions with the modern, it is noteworthy that at the time Durkheim (1858-1917) wrote these lectures on socialism and Saint-Simon (1760-1825), the latter was dead some I seventy years.
In some quarters a concern for the history of sociological
I theory is now regarded as misguided. Of course, it is easy to understand how the usual trite chronicle of thinkers and ideas could foster such a disillusioned appraisal. Yet this dim view of the history of sociological theory may be pre- maturely pessimistic about earlier theory and unduly opti-