What is Sociological Theory?
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Transcript What is Sociological Theory?
Lesson 3
Herbert Spencer
Robert Wonser
SOC 368 – Classical Sociological Theory
Spring 2014
Spencer’s Life
Born in Derby, England on April 27, 1820
Worked as a civil engineer for a railway
from 1837-1846
Worked as editor of The Economist
1850: Social Statics
Began suffering insomnia and nervous
breakdowns
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Received inheritance in 1853 which allowed him
to quit his job and live as a gentleman scholar.
Never earned a university degree or held an
academic position.
Didn’t like to read the intellectual work of others.
“All my life I have been a thinker and not a
reader, being able to say with Hobbes that ‘if I
had read as much as other men I would have
known as little’” – Spencer
Died December 8, 1903
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Spencer and Comte
Both fans of positivism, though Comte
went religious, Spencer was against this
(focused on what was knowable).
Both believed in societal evolution.
Both derived structure and function from
biology and tended to use them in similar
ways.
Both pivotal in development of structural
functionalism.
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Spencer and Comte
Spencer defines social statics as dealing
with the “equilibrium of a perfect society”
Social dynamics as relating to “the forces
of which society is advanced toward
perfection”
For Spencer the terms are normative, for
Comte, descriptive.
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Spencer was concerned with the knowable
world and was more scientific than
religious.
Through deduction from general laws,
Spencer articulates a series of ideas that
constitute his general evolutionary theory.
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Evolutionary Theory
All inorganic, organic, and superorganic
(societal) undergo evolution, devolution, or
dissolution.
His final evolutionary formula:
“Evolution is an integration of matter and
concomitant dissipation of motion; during which
the matter passes from an indefinite, incoherent
homogeneity, to a definite, coherent,
heterogeneity; and during which the retained
motion undergoes a parallel transformation.”
(Spencer, 1902/1958:394)
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Major elements of Spencer’s
Evolutionary Theory
1) progressive change from a less
coherent to a more coherent form;
increasing integration
2) movement from homogeneity to
heterogeneity; increasing differentiation
3) movement from disorder to order,
demarcation of social structure and
institutions; indefinite to the definite.
Applies to both structures and functions.
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Evolution
Evolution occurs because homogeneous
phenomena are inherently unstable.
These effects of instability giving way to
multiformity lead to heterogeneity which then
leads to the multiplication of these effects.
Segregation causes increasing multiplication of
the effects and further differentiation.
Leading to evolution.
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Sociology
“the study of sociology is the study of
evolution in its most complex form.”
(1873/1961:350)
Macro level focus; societies, social
structures, social institutions.
Should be understood as we understand
the natural world.
Laypeople believer erroneously that they
can understand society like sociologists.
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Sociology and Biology
Saw basic linkages between the two.
All social actions are determined by the actions
of individuals and that those actions conform to
the basic laws of life in general.
Powerful analogies between the two.
Living body, growth, structure and function.
Natural progression and linkage between the
two because humans are the “terminal” problem
for biology and starting place for sociology.
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Sociology and Psychology
“psychological truths underlie sociological
truths.”
Psychology studies feelings which were
linked to action.
Primitive people were more selfish,
modern more altruistic
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Sociological Methods
Difficulties facing Sociology:
Social phenomena are not directly
perceptible.
Subjectivities distort data of past and
present societies.
Sociologists’ biases influence more than in
natural sciences.
“value-free” position
Used comparative historical method
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Evolution of Society
Increasing integration (increasing size and
coalescence of masses of people)
Increasing heterogeneity
Increasing definiteness (clearly
demarcated social institutions)
Increasing coherence of social groups
(they stay together longer!)
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Society
Nominalism – society is nothing more than
its component parts
Realism – society is a distinct and
separate entity (Spencer’s view)
Organicism
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Society
Structure as an organization
accompanies increased size
Regulative (military activities) and
sustaining (economic activities that
maintain the group)
Function “the need subserved” by a
structure
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Simple and Compounded Societies
Simple societies constitute single working
entities that are not connected with other
entities.
Homogenous, uncivilized and uncompounded.
Compound increase in heterogeneity
Doubly compound societies are
recompounding compound groups
Trebly-compound, the great nations of the
world
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Militant and Industrial Societies
Militant societies tend to be dominated by the
regulative system whereas industrial societies
are characterized more highly developed
sustaining systems.
Militant – offensive and defensive warfare
Army and nation are one
Individual exists for the good of collectivity
War is useful for societal aggregation.
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Industrial Societies
Industrial societies dominated by
sustaining system and its industrial system
is more developed and diverse
Governments tend to be democratic
Individual is protected and permitted to
flourish
Military is subordinated to industrial
system.
Harmony, not conflict characterize
industrial societies
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Ethics and Politics
Spencer’s moral and political ideas are derived
from his methodological individualism.
Focused on macro but individuals were his
“units”
“The properties of the units determine the
properties of the aggregate” (Spencer,
1873/1961:41)
Individuals are endowed with a moral sense that
dictates their actions and the structure and
functioning of society.
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“Society is constantly excreting its
unhealthy, imbecile slow, vacillating,
faithless members”
The unfit should die off.
To help them, they’ll only breed and make
society worse off.
Only role fo state is protect the individual’s
liberty.
“survival of the fittest”
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Herbert Spencer’s Legacy
Who Now reads Spencer?
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