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The Solvay Institute of Sociology [SIS; Institut de Sociologie Solvay] assumed its first "definitive form" (: 26) on November 16, 1902, when its founder Ernest Solvay, a wealthy Belgian chemist, industrialist, and philanthropist, inaugurated the original edifice of SIS in Parc Léopold. Under the guidance of its first director, Emile Waxweiler, SIS expressed a "conception of a sociology open to all of the disciplines of the human sciences: ethnology, of course, but also economics [...] and psycho-physiology, contact with which was facilitated by the proximity of the Institute of Physiology" (: 486). While SIS is now part of the Université Libre de Bruxelles and known more simply as that university's Institute of Sociology [Institut de Sociologie], the approach instigated by Solvay and Wa

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  • Solvay Institute of Sociology (en)
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  • The Solvay Institute of Sociology [SIS; Institut de Sociologie Solvay] assumed its first "definitive form" (: 26) on November 16, 1902, when its founder Ernest Solvay, a wealthy Belgian chemist, industrialist, and philanthropist, inaugurated the original edifice of SIS in Parc Léopold. Under the guidance of its first director, Emile Waxweiler, SIS expressed a "conception of a sociology open to all of the disciplines of the human sciences: ethnology, of course, but also economics [...] and psycho-physiology, contact with which was facilitated by the proximity of the Institute of Physiology" (: 486). While SIS is now part of the Université Libre de Bruxelles and known more simply as that university's Institute of Sociology [Institut de Sociologie], the approach instigated by Solvay and Wa (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Parc_Leopold-Bruxelles,_lycée_Jacqmain_ancien_institut_de_physiologie.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Parc_Leopold_Bruxelles,_ancienne_bibliothèque_Solvay.jpg
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  • The Solvay Institute of Sociology [SIS; Institut de Sociologie Solvay] assumed its first "definitive form" (: 26) on November 16, 1902, when its founder Ernest Solvay, a wealthy Belgian chemist, industrialist, and philanthropist, inaugurated the original edifice of SIS in Parc Léopold. Under the guidance of its first director, Emile Waxweiler, SIS expressed a "conception of a sociology open to all of the disciplines of the human sciences: ethnology, of course, but also economics [...] and psycho-physiology, contact with which was facilitated by the proximity of the Institute of Physiology" (: 486). While SIS is now part of the Université Libre de Bruxelles and known more simply as that university's Institute of Sociology [Institut de Sociologie], the approach instigated by Solvay and Waxweiler still serves as methodological framework: a synergy between basic and applied research involving interdisciplinary studies firmly anchored in social life. (en)
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