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== Other theories & conceptual tools == | == Other theories & conceptual tools == | ||
=== | |||
=== Overton Window === | |||
* Joseph Overton observed that along the spectrum of social or political thought, policy, or opinion | |||
** there exists a mainstream "middle" of consensus | |||
*** that middle may have variances, but most people generally agree with it | |||
** with extremes on both sides that are not generally accepted | |||
** however, as one extreme or the other becomes acceptable, they enter into the "Overton Window" | |||
** example: | |||
*** in the 1950s, rock music was considered anti-social, thus lay outside of the Overton Window | |||
*** as its popularity grew, especially following Elvis Presley, rock music became popular music | |||
**** and thus, entered the Overton Window | |||
=== Weber's "Protestant Work Ethic & the Spirit of Capitalism" === | === Weber's "Protestant Work Ethic & the Spirit of Capitalism" === | ||
* Social Scientist Max Weber attributed the economic success of U.S. and northwestern European nations to their dominant "Protestant work ethic" | |||
* based on | |||
** individualism and notions of self-sufficiency | |||
** ethics of hard work, timeliness, frugality, etc. | |||
*** that cumulatively yielded productive economies and a dominant middle class | |||
* note that Weber's seen today by "critical race" theorists as elements of "white privilege" | |||
==External Resources== | ==External Resources== |