Max Weber 18641920 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 54
About This Presentation
Title:

Max Weber 18641920

Description:

Born April 21, 1864 in Erfurt, Germany- the oldest of 7 Children ... are adopting the principles of the fast food industry ie. Toys R Us, AAMCO etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1693
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 55
Provided by: FayeLin
Category:
Tags: max | toys | us | weber

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Max Weber 18641920


1
Max Weber(1864-1920)
2
Max Weber- The Man
  • Born April 21, 1864 in Erfurt, Germany- the
    oldest of 7 Children
  • Caught between two very different parental
    influences.
  • Father was involved in the political
    establishment and lived a self-satisfied,
    pleasure-loving and shallow life.
  • His mother was a staunch Calvinist and came from
    a family of educators.
  • As a child, Weber was sickly and withdrawn
  • In school, he was known for his lack of
    discipline, however, he was an avid reader. His
    personal letters reveal that even before college,
    he was well versed in philosophy.
  • His home life was difficult. His father was a
    strict disciplinarian.
  • Attended University of Heidelberg in 1881. Here
    he joined the dueling fraternity, drank an awful
    lot, and proudly displayed his new dueling scars.
    He also studied philosophy, history and law.
  • Fell in love with his cousin, Emmy, but had to
    break off his six year engagement to her, as she
    had been confined to a sanitarium for most of it.
  • 1884 began study for a PHD at the University of
    Berlin. During this time, he began to resent his
    father, and his bullying treatment of his mother.
  • He graduated Summa Cum Laude in 1891.
  • 1892 began teaching at the University of Berlin.
    Here he was known for rigid and ascetic
    discipline.

3
  • 1893 Married Marianne Schnitger. Yet the
    marriage was never consummated. He had a brief
    extra-marital affair in his mid-40s just before
    WWI.
  • 1896 took a position as professor economics at
    Heidelberg. His home became a gathering spot for
    the young intellectuals in the area.
  • Weber was also politically active, publishing
    commentary on issues of the day.
  • 1887 Webers father dies. Only a month before
    his fathers death, they had a serious
    disagreement over the treatment of Webers
    mother. He ordered his father out of his house,
    and did not see him again.
  • After this, Weber suffers a Nervous break down.
    It lasts for 5 years.
  • 1903- he finally seems to recover and he is named
    editor of the leading German Social Science
    Journal.
  • 1904 visits the United States, begins to return
    to normal academic life.
  • 1905- Publishes the Protestant Ethic and the
    Spirit of Capitalism.
  • Continued to work
  • 1910- one of the founders of the German
    Sociological Society with Simmel and Toennies

4
  • During WWI he enlisted and was commissioned as a
    reserve officer to establish and run nine
    military hospitals. He also campaigned against
    the war, and was a proponent of peace.
  • 1917-1920 He was a productive and active figure
  • Died 1920 while working on Economy and Society.
    His last words were The Truth is the Truth.
  • Throughout his life he had a strong sense of
    justice and he actively campaigned for the merit
    of marginalized scholar to be recognized (Simmel,
    Sombart, Michels). He defended ethnic minority
    students (Jews, Poles, Russians) who were often
    shunned by professors. He defended pacifists
    during WWI. He never adopted a cause or
    abandoned one because it was politically
    expedient, he was his own man, and was guided
    by a personal sense of justice.

5
Webers Methodology
  • Weber tends to de-emphasize methodological
    issues.
  • Clearly Weber has no concern with methodology in
    the sense of rulebooks for correct practice...
    His methodological essays are more in the nature
    of philosophical reflections upon the nature and
    significance of claims to historical and social
    knowledge. Lassman and Velody, 1949.

6
Weber on Methodology
  • Only by laying bare and solving substantive
    problems can sciences be established and their
    methods developed. On the other hand, purely
    epistemological and methodological reflections
    have never played the crucial role in such
    developments. (1903)

7
Weber on the Role of Sociology
  • Sociology would provide a needed service to
    history- a preliminary and modest task.
    Sociology seeks to formulate type concepts and
    generalized uniformities of empirical processes.
    This distinguishes it from history, which is
    oriented to the causal analysis and explanation
    of individual actions, structures and
    personalities possessing cultural significance.
  • What he said, and what he did.

8
Webers Project
  • His project was oriented to the development of
    clear concepts so that he could perform a causal
    analysis of historical phenomena.
  • He defined his ideal procedure as the sure
    imputation of individual concrete events
    occurring in historical reality to concrete,
    historically given causes through the study of
    precise empirical data which have been selected
    from specific points of view.
  • Sociology would be a comprehensive science of
    social action.

9
Intellectual Influences- Marx and Nietzsche
  • Marx- was deeply influenced by his concept that
    ideas were expressions of public interests and
    served as weapons in the struggle of classes and
    parties. However, unlike Marx (economic
    determinist), Weber gave more power to the
    influence of ideas.
  • Nietzschean- Applied his notion of Ressentiment
    (an expression of the repressed envy and hatred
    of socially disadvantaged groups).
  • However, he did not reduce ideas to reflections
    of psychic or social interests.

10
Webers Influences
  • Webers thinking was shaped by a series of
    intellectual debates (Methodenstreit) raging in
    Germany during his time.
  • Positivist versus Subjectivists
  • Posititivists thought history was composed of
    general nomothetic laws. Positivists thought
    that history/sociology should be exactly like
    other natural sciences
  • Subjectivists reduced history to idiosyncratic,
    ideographic actions and events. whereas
    subjectivists saw the two as radically different.

11
Webers View
  • Weber rejected both poles.
  • History is composed of unique empirical events.
  • There can be no generalizations at the empirical
    level.
  • Sociologists must, therefore, separate the
    empirical world from the conceptual universe that
    they construct.
  • Concepts are heuristic devices.

12
Does Weber Believe in Ahistoric Laws?
  • For the knowledge of historical phenomena in
    their concreteness, the most general laws,
    because they are devoid of content, are also the
    least valuable. The reduction of empirical
    reality... to laws is meaningless. A
    systematic science of culture... would be
    senseless in itself.

13
For Weber- Is History Progressive Or Cyclical
  • History is neither a closed cycle or a linear
    progress
  • History was appropriately concerned with both
    individuality and generality. He utilized
    ideal types, or concepts in the study of
    particular individuals, events or societies.
    These general concepts are to be used to
    identify and define the individuality of each
    development, the characteristics which make the
    one conclude in a manner so different from that
    of the other. Thus done, one can then determine
    the causes which led to the difference (1896)

14
Webers View of Social Change
  • Though material conditions must be present for
    changes to occur, without the requisite
    ideological changes, other changes will not occur.

15
Understanding Ideology
  • Ideology is a complex belief system that
    explains social and political arrangements and
    relationships and underlies all social and
    political discourse and actions.
  • Dominant ideologies legitimize and rationalize
    behavior and social relationships.

16
An Empirical Example
  • The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
  • There is an elective affinity between the
    Protestant work ethic and Industrial Capitalism.
  • Though similar conditions existed in many
    predominantly Catholic areas, industrial
    capitalism did not arise at that time.

17
Webers View of the Ideological Underpinnings of
Change
  • 1) Economic activity was not sanctioned by
    religious values, for the Calvinist it was.
    Catholicism encouraged an otherwordly
    asceticism in which the highest form of human
    activity was devotion to God.
  • 2) There was no prohibition on consumption, as
    there was in Calvinism. (Note the shift in
    religious values under consumer capitalism today)
  • 3) Calvinism suggested that each man is a free
    moral agent, accountable only to God.
    Catholicism, made men accountable to the Church,
    which sought to regulate the operation of the
    economy. Religious authorities set wages,
    prices, regulated competition, outlawed money
    lending, all of which retard Capitalist
    development.

18
Verstehen- Empathetic Understanding
  • Methodological Concept
  • Social scientists have an advantage over natural
    scientists. Natural scientists could not gain a
    similar understanding of the behavior of an atom
    or a chemical compound.
  • His views on verstehen are derived from
    hermeneutics
  • Hermeneutics is a special approach to
    understanding and interpretation of published
    writings. The goal was to understand the
    thinking of the author as well as the basic
    structure of the text.
  • Weber applied these ideas to actors, interaction
    and human history.
  • Verstehen requires rigorous research.

19
Weber on Causality
  • Weber saw the causes of social phenomena as being
    within the domain of history, not sociology.
    Yet, he still combined elements of it in his
    work.
  • To Weber, causality means the probability that an
    event will be followed or accompanied by another
    event.
  • What are the reasons for as well as the meanings
    of, historical change.
  • - Weber has a multi-causal approach. He is
    attuned to the interrelationships among the
    economy, society, polity, organization, social
    stratification, religion, etc.

20
Understanding Webers View of Causality
  • Through verstehen, the causal knowledge of the
    social sciences is different from the causal
    knowledge of the natural sciences.
  • Adequate causality- This is the view that the
    best we can do in sociology is to make
    probabilistic statements about the relationships
    between social phenomena.

21
Ideal Types
  • A concept constructed by a social scientist, on
    the basis of his or her interests and theoretical
    orientation, to capture the essential features of
    some social phenomenon.
  • It is a heuristic device, helpful and useful in
    doing empirical research and in understanding
    specific aspects of the social world.
  • An ideal type is formed by the one-sided
    accentuation of one or more points of view and by
    the synthesis of a great many diffuse, discrete,
    more or less present and occasionally absent
    concrete individual phenomena, which are arranged
    according to those onesidedly emphasized
    viewpoints into an unified analytical
    construct... In its conceptual purity, this
    mental construct... Cannot be found empirically
    anywhere in reality. 1903

22
Should Sociology be Value Free
  • Webers thinking on values is complicated.
  • Values and Teaching
  • Values and Research

23
Weber and the Role of Social Science
  • It can never be the task of an empirical
    science to provide binding norms and ideals from
    which directions for immediate practical activity
    can be derived.

24
Weber and What is Sociology
  • His sociology is a reaction to the large-scale
    evolutionary sociology that predominated at the
    time.
  • I became one (a sociologist) in order to put an
    end to collectivist notions. In other words,
    sociology, too, can only be practiced by
    proceeding from the action of one or more, few or
    many, individuals, that means by employing a
    strictly individualist method.

25
Sociology Defined
  • Sociology... is a science concerning itself
    with the interpretive understanding of social
    action and thereby with a causal explanation of
    its course and consequences.
  • Weber believes sociology is a science, just not
    one exactly like a natural scientist.

26
Weber on Social Action
  • There is a difference between action and reactive
    behavior. He is concerned with action that
    clearly involved the intervention of thought
    processes. Rather than behavior, that is more
    stimulus-response oriented.
  • Four Basic Types of Action

27
Four Basic Types of Action
  • 1) Means-Ends Rationality
  • 2) Value Rationality
  • 3) Affectual Action
  • 4) Traditional Action

28
Means-End Rational Action (zweck-rational)
  • Both the goal and means are rationally chosen.
    Ie. An engineer who builds a bridge by the most
    efficient technique of relating means to ends.

29
Value Oriented Rational Action (wertrational)
  • Striving for a substantive goal, which may in
    itself not be rational (Ie. Attainment of
    salvation), but is pursued through rational means
    (ie. Ascetic self-denial in the pursuit of
    holiness).

30
Affectual Action
  • Is anchored in the emotional state of the actor,
    rather than in the rational weighing of means
    and ends (fundamentalist sects and the
    participants experience of the religious service)

31
Traditional Action
  • Is guided by customary habits of thought, by
    reliance on the eternal yesterday. (Orthodox
    behavior ie. Dress, comportment guided by
    tradition).

32
Action in the Modern World
  • Behavior is increasingly guided by goal oriented
    rationality, whereas, in the past is as often
    motivated by tradition, affect, or goal oriented
    rationality.

33
Webers View of Stratification
  • Class
  • Status
  • Party
  • More nuanced viewed. One could be high on one
    axes, or low on another.

34
Class
  • A class is a group of people whose shared
    situation is a possible, and sometimes frequent
    basis for action by the group. 1) A number of
    people have in common a specific causal component
    of their life changes, insofar as 2) this
    component is represented exclusively by economic
    interests in the possession of goods and
    opportunities for income, and 3) is represented
    under the conditions of the commodity or labor
    markets. This is class situation.

35
Status
  • Every typical component of the life of men that
    is determined by a specific, positive or
    negative, social estimation of honor.
  • Money and an entrepreneurial position are not in
    themselves status qualifications, although they
    may lead to them and the lack of property is not
    itself a status disqualification, although this
    may be a reason for it. 1921

36
Party
  • Are always structures struggling for domination
  • Parties often represent a class or status group.

37
The Bureaucratization of Modern Society
  • Bureaucracy- rule by office.
  • There is a general increase in the domination of
    complex organizations.
  • There is a general increase in the domination of
    complex secondary organizations or
    Bureaucratization.
  • Bureaucratic coordination of activities, he
    argued, is the distinctive mark of the modern
    era.
  • Bureaucracies are organized around rationality,
    and action is of the purposeful type.

38
Ideal Type of Bureaucracy
  • 1. There is continuous organization of official
    functions bound by rules.
  • 2. Each office has a specified sphere of
    competence.
  • 3. There is a clear cut hierarchy of authority-
    like a pyramid
  • 4. Offices may carry with them technical
    qualifications that require that the participants
    obtain suitable training.
  • 5. Officials are full time and salaried.
  • 6. There is a separation between the tasks of an
    official within the organization and his life
    outside.
  • 7. No members of the organization own the
    material resources with which they operate.
  • 8. Administrative acts, decisions, and rules are
    formulated and recorded in writing.

39
Three Features Set Bureaucracies Apart
  • -1) Membership Status
  • -2) Internal Structuring
  • -3) Capacity to Have Persona

40
Forms of Cultural Authority
  • Traditional
  • Charismatic
  • Legal-Rational

41
Traditional Authority
  • Ancient original method of defining correct
    beliefs and practices. tied to kinship,
    patrimonial rule. Leadership is based on
    sanctity of age old rules and powers.
  • Personal loyalty, not the officials impersonal
    duty, determines the relations of administrative
    staff to the master. Weber 1921
  • -Types of Traditional Authority
  • -1. Gerontocracy- Rule by elders
  • -2. Primary patriarchalism involves leaders who
    inherit their positions.

42
Charismatic Authority
  • Is based on extraordinary personal
    characteristics. It gives some individuals the
    authority to control, represent and define the
    interests of the group or organization because of
    their unique personalities. It may or may not be
    that the leader is charismatic, but rather the
    group of disciples need describe the person as
    such.
  • -Charisma and Revolution
  • -Routinization of charisma

43
Legal Rational Authority
  • Subject to authority of formal laws. Bureaucracy
    as the purest type of exercise of legal
    authority.
  • Webers Ideal Typical Bureaucracy- From a purely
    technical point of view, a bureaucracy is capable
    of attaining the highest degree of efficiency,
    and is in this sense formally the most rational
    known means of exercising authority over human
    beings. It is superior to any other form in
    precision, in stability, in the stringency of its
    discipline, and in its reliability. It thus
    makes possible a particularly high degree of
    calculability of results for the heads of
    organization and for those acting in relation to
    it. It is finally superior both in intensive
    efficiency and in the scope of its operations and
    is formally capable of application to all kinds
    of administrative tasks. 1921

44
The Iron Cage of Bureaucracy
  • No machinery in the world functions so precisely
    as this apparatus of men, and moreover, so
    cheaply... Rational calculation... Reduces
    every worker to a cog in this bureaucratic
    machine and, seeing himself in this light, he
    will merely ask how to transform himself into a
    somewhat bigger cog... The passion for
    bureaucratization drives it to despair.
  • He describes bureaucracies as escape proof.
    Practically unshatterable and the future
    belongs to bureaucratization.

45
Rationality- Four Types
  • 1) Practical Rationality- Every way of life that
    views and judges worldly activity in relation to
    the individuals purely pragmatic and egoistic
    interests.
  • 2) Theoretical Rationality- involves a cognitive
    effort to master reality through increasingly
    abstract concepts rather than through action.
  • 3) Substantive rationality- directly orders
    action into patterns through clusters of values.
    One value system is no more rational than
    another.
  • 4) Formal Rationality- involves means -ends
    calculations. In formal rationality it occurs in
    reference to universally applied rules, laws, and
    regulations.

46
Bureaucratic Rationalization
  • Bureaucratic rationalization...
    Revolutionalizes with technical means, in
    principle, as does every economic reorganization,
    from without It first changes the material and
    social orders, and through them the people, by
    changing the conditions of adaptation, and
    perhaps the opportunities for adaptation, through
    a rational determination of means and ends.
    (1921)

47
Rationalization Processes
  • This whole process of rationalization in the
    factory as elsewhere, and especially in the
    bureaucratic state machine, parallels the
    centralization of the material implements of
    organization in the hands of the master. Thus,
    discipline inexorably takes over ever larger
    areas as the satisfaction of political and
    economic needs is increasingly rationalized.
    This universal phenomenon more and more restricts
    the importance of charisma and of individually
    differentiated conduct.

48
Formal and Substantive Rationality
  • 1) Calculability- things should be quantifiable.
  • 2) Efficiency- on finding the best means to a
    given end.
  • 3) Predictability- things operate the same way
    from time to time and place to place.
  • 4) A formally rational system progressively
    reduces human technology and ultimately replaced
    human technology with nonhuman technology.
  • 5) Control over an array of uncertainties are
    sought.
  • 6) Irrational consequences for people involved
    with rational systems often arise.

49
McDonaldization
  • What is McDonaldization- The process by which
    the principles of the fast food restaurant are
    coming to dominate more and more sectors of
    American Society as well as the rest of the
    world. Ritzer

50
The Dimensions of McDonaldization
  • -Efficiency
  • -Calculability (everything can be measured and
    calculated)
  • -Predictability
  • -Control through nonhuman technologies

51
Signs of McDonaldization
  • 1) Growth of Franchises
  • 2) Sales at fast food restaurants now exceed
    sales at traditional dining establishments.
  • 3) McDonalds model being adopted by different
    types of food chains ie. Starbucks
  • 4) The Starbucks revolution
  • 5) Casual dining is being franchised ie. Outback
    steakhouse
  • 6) Other types of business are adopting the
    principles of the fast food industry ie. Toys R
    Us, AAMCO etc.
  • 7) International success of franchises
  • 8) Global success of McDonaldized firms ie.
    Blockbusters
  • 9) Other nations now franchising products
  • 10) Import of other franchised firms to U.S.

52
The Advantages of McDonaldization
  • 1) A wider range of goods and services is
    available to a much larger portion of the
    population than ever before.
  • 2) Availability of goods and services depends far
    less than before on time or geographic location
    people can do things, such as obtain money at the
    grocery store or a bank balance in the middle of
    the night, that were impossible before.
  • 3) People are able to get what they want or need
    almost instantaneously and get if far more
    conveniently.
  • 4) Good and services are of a far more uniform
    quality at least some people get better goods
    and services than before McDonaldization.
  • 5) Far more economical alternatives to
    high-priced, customized goods and services are
    widely available therefore, people can afford
    things they could not previously afford.
  • 6) Fast, efficient goods and services are
    available to a population that is working longer
    hours and has fewer hours to spare.

53
The Irrationality of Rationality
  • 1) Inefficiency
  • 2) High Cost
  • 3) The Illusion of Fun
  • 4) The Illusion of Reality
  • 5) False Friendliness
  • 6) Disenchantment
  • 7) Health and Environmental Hazards
  • 8) Homogenization
  • 9) Dehumanization

54
Advantages of McDonaldization
  • 7) In a rapidly changing, unfamiliar, and
    seemingly hostile world, the comparatively
    stable, familiar, and safe environment of a
    McDonaldized system offers comfort.
  • 8) Because of quantification, consumers can more
    easily compare competing products.
  • 9) Certain products (for example, diet programs)
    are safer in a carefully regulated and controlled
    system.
  • 10) People are more likely to be treated
    similarly, no matter what their race, gender or
    social class.
  • 11) Organizational and technological innovations
    are more quickly and easily diffused through
    networks of identical operators.
  • 12) The most popular products of one culture are
    more easily diffused to others.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com