SOC4044 Sociological Theory Max Weber Dr. Ronald Keith Bolender
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Transcript SOC4044 Sociological Theory Max Weber Dr. Ronald Keith Bolender
Max Weber
1864-1920
1
Rationality and
Organization
Background
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBMNDJZHEeI&feature=fvst
Maximilian Karl Emil "Max" Weber
Born in Erfurt, Germany (1864)
Well-to-do family
Eldest of eight children
Sickly child
Physical problems
Mental problems
Background
3
His mother (Helene Fallenstein):
Calvinist
Concerned with social issues
Very religious
His father (Max Weber):
Politician
Lawyer
Self-centered and authoritarian
Mr. and Mrs. Max Weber
4
Background
5
Parents had marriage problems
Different beliefs and values
Max Weber and his brother Alfred
became sociologists and
economists.
Max Weber
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Weber
Pronounced:
“vay-bear”
Max, Alfred, and Karl ->
(1879)
Max Weber’s Sociology
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Concerned with individuals, as
well as social structure
Macro
Micro
Max Weber: Sociology
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Comprehensive science of
Social Action
Behavior versus Action
Behavior=
move, react, eat etc.
Action=Behavior + Meaning
Different from Other Theorists
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Spencer: Evolution of society as
analogous to an organism
Natural laws of society
Durkheim: Society as an organism
Maintaining cohesion of social
structures
Social Solidarity
Different from Other Theorists
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Marx: Society influenced by economy
Conflict between social classes
Malinowski: Society functions to meet
needs of individuals
Holistic approach
Max Weber: Social Action
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Weber’s primary focus:
Subjective meanings that humans attach
to their actions and interactions
Within specific social contexts
Behavior without meaning, is not in
the purview of sociology
Max Weber: Social Action
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Four Major Types of Social Action
1. Traditional Action
Guided by custom or habit
Action is simply "always done"
Example: Celebrating holidays
Max Weber: Social Action
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2. Emotional or Affective Action
Motivated by emotional state
Love, Anger, Happiness, Revenge
Examples:
Going
to college because your boyfriend
or girlfriend is attending that school
Hitting a person out of anger
Max Weber: Social Action
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3. Value-oriented Rational Action
Working toward a goal, which may not be
rational
But is pursued through rational means
Values: Ethical, Religious, Philosophical
Not rationally "chosen“
Example: Going to college because you
value learning and knowledge
Max Weber: Social Action
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4. Instrumental Rational
(Goal-oriented Rational Action)
Goals & means are rationally chosen
Example:
Earning
a college degree in order to get
a good paying job
How to get rich
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yz81sLCy--c
Max Weber: Social Action
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Primarily concerned with modern
Western society
Behavior increasingly dominated by
goal-oriented rationality
In the past: Motivated by tradition,
affect, or value-oriented rationality
Rationalization
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Rational calculation, Efficiency,
and Control (Bureaucracy)
Replace:
Affective ties
Spirituality
Tradition
Max Weber: Ideal Types
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An ideal type not meant to refer to “best” or
to a moral ideal
e.g., Ideal type brothel or Ideal type chapel
Analytical construct that provides a
basic method for comparative study
Max Weber: Ideal Types
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Identifies “logically consistent”
features of social institution
Compare “ideal type” to reality
Used to develop research hypotheses
Example of Ideal Type
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Four characteristics of Ideal type
Capitalism
1. Private ownership
Means
of production
2. Pursuit of Profit
3. Competition
4. No government intervention
TR Legitimation & Authority
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Legitimation->
Turns coercion into
acceptable Authority
Authority = Legitimate Power
Three
modes of authority
1. Legal-rational
2. Traditional
3. Charismatic
Max Weber: Authority
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1. Legal-rational authority
Based on impersonal rules
Rules are legally enacted or
contractually established
Examples: Presidents, judges
Max Weber: Authority
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2. Traditional authority
Based
on belief in tradition
Passed down generation to
generation
Examples: Aristocracy, Parents,
Elders
Max Weber: Authority
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3. Charismatic authority
Allegiance
to leader
Leader’s characteristics
Quality of individual's personality
Source of change
Examples: Martin Luther King Jr.,
Gandhi
Max Weber: Bureaucracy
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Formal organization of large-scale
enterprises for example:
Government
Military
Economy
Religion
Education
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBCAlZPF0D0
Max Weber: Bureaucracy
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Ideal-type Bureaucracy:
Clearly
defined division of labor
Rationality
Attention to implementing goals
of organization
Impersonal application of rules
Routinization of tasks
Max Weber: Bureaucracy
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Major advantage
Calculability of results
Dysfunctions of bureaucracy
Depersonalization
Difficult to deal with individual cases
Personnel are replaceable
Information flows from top-down
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TypEb0tbFho
George Tooker paintings illustrate rationality and modernity
MW
Max Weber: Class, Status, and Party
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Method for Studying Social Stratification:
Sources of Power
Social Class
“…property…and
Life
lack of property…”
chances
Socio-economic category
Lower
class
Middle class
Upper class
Sources of Power: Class, Status, & Party
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Status
Prestige
Honor
Evaluations
people make of one
another
Ranking desired behavior & traits
2009
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Max Weber: Party
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Association that attempts to influence
social action
Religious
Political
Age-based
Race/Ethnicity
Lobbyists
Working toward a goal in a planned
manner (i.e., rationally)
Weber’s Contribution to Sociology
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◦ Stratification theory (class, status,
party)
◦ Bureaucracy & large scale organizations
◦ Power & Authority
◦ Sociology of law
◦ Sociology of religion
Weber’s Contribution to Sociology
Theory and Methodology
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“Verstehen” helps in understanding
why certain behaviors occur
Social Action: Subjective meanings
Values: Role in relationships
Weber’s Contribution to Sociology
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Multi-causality
Complete
of Social Phenomena
Objectivity is Impossible
◦ Values & Value relevance
Weber’s Contribution to Sociology
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The
Protestant Ethic & The Spirit of
Capitalism
◦ Cultural barriers can prevent an
economy from growing to its full
potential
Ex: religion
Weber’s Contribution to Sociology
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Max Weber had more powerful positive
impact on a wide range of sociological
theories than any other sociological
theorist
Created the German Association for
Sociology (1909)
Starting Point for Careers:
Karl Mannheim, Talcott Parsons, Robert
Merton and C. Wright Mills