SOCIOLOGY 473 - SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES

                    Classical Theorists
 
                          SPENCER
 
For Spencer,  simlar to Comte--- two primary factors of social
phenomena are the external environment and the physical and social
constitution of the individual.  The former  can influence  society
only  through the  latter, which thus becomes the essential  force of
social evolution.   If society is formed, it is in order to permit the
individual to express is nature, and all the transformations
throughwhich this nature  has passed have no  other object than tomake
this expression easier and more complete.
 
                      II. MONTESQUIEU
 
   1.   Montesquieu---18th century philoshoper,  historian--tried to
        make history intelligible;
 
   2.  Montesquieu  took a "determinist"  view of institutions; yet
       he examined these against universal values.  .
 
   3.  He looked at unemployment in context of changing technical
       changes, etc.
 
   4.  But focused especially on law and political philosophy (SIGNIFICANCE:
       This shaped how subsequent theorists examined the subject;  ie,
       provided a MODEL, an EXAMPLE,  and posed questions and issues.
 
   5.  For MONTESQUIEU, then, society was diverse,  and for him the
       INTELLECTUAL TASK was to  create order from apparent chaos.
       SIG of montesquieu was sociological analysis of positive law,
       the application of determiniism to social nature.  The logic of
       his thought consisted of three elements:
 
          1) Observe the diversity of positive laws

          2) analyze this diversity  in terms of multiple
             (social) causes

         3) develop practical advice to offer legislator as
            result of scientific exposition of laws. Montesquieu
            was  devoid of the ideology  which constitutes almost 
            all contemporary sociology:
 
THE BELIEF IN PROGRESS.
 
This was a major theme of Comte's work.  Note here the TYPE of
practice. ..  Theory shapes PRAXIS--different than  today,  which  is
other  way around...practice tends to shape theory
 
                       AUGUSTE COMTE
 
COMTE was an early 19th century social philosopher. He is
considered the SOCIOLOGIST OF HUMAN AND SOCIAL UNITY.  He says
Human History as a single entity.   For him,  SOCIAL ORDER was an
expression of CIVIL ORDER, and "the preponderate social forces, of
necessity, at last, become the directing ones."  That is,  there  is
an instinctual independent tendency toward social (or species)
improvement, both in the individual and in  the race,  which leads  to
the progress through history of the human  mind and of people's
intellectual, emotional, and powers.  The political order, in turn,
MUST REFLECT this organization (rather than vice-versa)  and must be
able to DIRECT this development.  This requires, for a "good" society,
a UNITY between political organization and the social attributes to be
directed.  (NOTE: AN "evolutionist" theme).
 
   1.  He was responding to  Hegel's "negativity" (negation,
       etc)...for comte, world was unity, not dissolving into new
       forms, etc
 
   2.  Considered FIRST  sociologist (but only  because he came up
       with the term
 
   3.  the FUNCTION of sociology, for Comte,  was to  understand the
       necessary,  indispensable,  and INEVITABLE course of history in
       such a way as to promote the realization  of a  new order
       (EG--NOTE PURPOSE  OF KNOLWEDGE HERE. . .)
 
   4.  From Durkheim (p 98)--Durkheim opposes Comte's emphasis on the
       psychological:   For Comte, he says,  the social phenomenon,
       conceived in  its totality,  is fundmentally only a simple
       development of  humanity,without the  creation of any special
       faculties  whatsoever."  The predominant fct  in social life is
       progress, which depends on an exlucisvely ychological factor,
       namely, the tendency which impels man to perfect his nature
       more and more.  He identified THREE stage of human evolution
       and science,  ie, that the human mind passes through 3 stages:
 
      a)  We explain things by ascribing them to beings or forces
          comparable to ourselves (eg, "GOD", "BEINGS")

      b)  Metaphysics, ie,  we invoke abstract entities like "nature"
 
      c)  We observe things  and discover regularities and laws
 
      For comte, sociology became a SCIENCE like other sciences,  and
      just as there is  no free will in math, there is none in
      society. But sociologists nonetheless do IMPOSE their verdicts
      (eg, discoveries) in sociology and politics just as in math or
      astronomy.
 
    5.  SUM:   For Comte, then,  the SOCIOLOGICAL task was to
        contemplate the internal contradiction of the society of his
        age,  the contradiction between the theoological and military
        type of society (which characterized his period (ie, 17th,
        18th centuries)  and the scientific-industrial type emerging
        in  the 18th-19th century.   Ideas would GOVERN the emerging
        social order, and thus KNOWLEDGE was seen as the means to
        guide evolution of human development.
 
The TASK of sociology, for COMTE,   is to understand the necessary,
indispensable,  and INEVITABLE course of history in such a way  as to
PROMOTE the realization of the new order.  [NOTE: He was responding
especially to the French  revolution,  and the contradiction  between
the  old  monarchy  and the  new revolutionary and democratic forces].
We can thus  identify three major themes  in Comte's thinking:
 
       a) Industrial society (ie, western Europe)  would become the
       society of all species-kind
 
       b) Universality of scientific thinking.  .  .in two senses:  a)
          It's THE way to think, and b)  would be spread to everybody
 
       c)  Human nature is fundamentally the same (as is social
           order):  thus comes the questions:   Where does DIVERSITY come
           from?
 
   7.  Comte borrowed his  answer from others in  the early 19th
       century, who recognized that something NOVEL was occuring, ie,
       industrialization,  which had six features:
 
        a) Industry is a form of scientific organization

        b) involves tremendous development of  wealth and resources 

        c) there emerges WORKING MASSES 4) this brings about an
           antagonism between social classes (pre-dates MARX)

        d) Although wealth and benefits increase, so do social and
           econ crises e) Free enterprise (unchecked profit seeking)
           becomes the primary social organizing force
 
Where Montesquieu posited the principle  of determinism in historical and
social phenomena,  Comte  offered a simplified interpretaation. To
him, this became a deterministic evolution.
 
His central IDEAL:  SOCIAL PHENOMENA ARE SUBJECT TO  A STRICT
DETERMINISM WHICH SEPARATES IN THE  FORM OF AN INEVITABLE  EVOLUTINO
OF HUMAN SOCIETIES WHICH IS  GOVERNED BY THE PROGRESS  OF THE HUMAN
MIND.
 
This was a positivist phiosphy, ie, a philosophy of observation,
experimentation, analysis and determinism.   The sociology which he
offers is the  study of the LAWS  OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
 
NOTES:   THESE EARLY ANALYSTS WERE CONCERNED PRIMARILY WITH MACRO
TOPICS (EG, HISTORY, SOCIAL EVOLUTION, ETC)
 
For comte,  the history of intelligence proceeds from fetishism (ie,
imputing meaning to inanimate objects)  to postivism (discovery of
laws).  History, therefore, leads to increasing differentiation of
social functions  and characteristics (because of influence of mind on
the world), and thus history is a PROCESS of unification (something
like HEGEL, but UPSIDE DOWN).
 
Comte saw such development as being governed by FORCE, namely, number
and wealth.  That force should prevail is normal, and it is primarily
HOW force  is applied and for what ends, NOT WHETHER IT EXISTS that is
the important question.
 
NOTE: BOTH Montesquieu and Comte opposed to VIOLENCE. They did not
believe societies required revolutions, etc, to resol crises and
conflict,  or that even if such violence was successful in the short
term, it would ultimately help a society fulfill it's DESTINY.
History subject to laws of evolution, NOT revolution.
 
SO:  Comte's over-all tasks, then, was a) social reform, and b)
unification of all scientific knowledge (into positivism) Comte viewed
a  "social science" as a  "natural science" in that we apply the same
rules of logic and method (ie, systematic observation)  to inquiry.
For this reason,  his is often called the "FATHER" of sociology.
 
One way he  examined this was to  examine the contradiction between
society AS IT EXISTED (eg, the theological and military and the
emerging "rational" society (eg, industrial and scientific type).
Three major themes in his work:
 
   1.  Industrial society (equivalent to  society of Western Europe at
       that time) would eventually become "universal." Some see  Comte
       as combining Montesquieu's  theme of DETERINISM and Condorcet's
       theme of necessary sequential stages in the progress of  the
       human mind to arrive at his central idea.  This central idea
       may be summarized as follows:
 
            Social phenomena  are subject to  a strict determinism
            which separates in  the form of an inevitable  evolution
            of  human societies--an evolution which is itself governed
            by the  progress of the human  mind (Aron, 1969: 82).
 
       Comte was concerned with reducing the seemingly infinite
       variety of human societies  in time and space to a fundamental
       set, The development of the human  race,  and to a single
       design:  the culmination in an ultimate state of the human race
       and of the human mind.  For Comte, the POSTIVIST METHOD was
       based on
 
       a)  observation
       b) experimentation,
       c)  the establishment of general laws

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