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Emile Durkheim

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Title: Emile Durkheim


1
Emile Durkheim
  • The Man
  • Society and the Social Fact
  • Social Solidarity
  • The Sacred and the Profane

2
Emile Durkheim 1858-1917
  • Born 1858 in Epinal France
  • Originally Studied to be a Rabbi
  • Studied at the Ecole Normale in 1879.
  • Taught philosophy in France 1882-1887
  • Traveled to Germany in 1887, then obtained a post
    at the University of Bordeaux (France)
  • Married the former Louise Dreyfus, and played an
    active role in defending Alfred Dreyfus (1894)
  • 1885 published The Rules of Sociological Method
  • 1897- Suicide
  • 1898 Founded Journal Lannée sociologique.
  • 1906 named professor of the Science of Education
    at the Sorbonne
  • 1912- The Elementary Forms of Religious Life
  • 1913 changed to professor of Education and
    Sociology.
  • 1915- his son is killed in WWI
  • Died November 15, 1917.

3
Progressive/Evolutionary Thinking
  • Based on assumptions of predictable, cumulative
    change from one stage to another. Usually more
    complex and in the direction of increasing
    adaptability.
  • The Fitness of Sociocultural Traits
  • Emile Durkheim

4
The Influence of Organicism
  • Organicism-The concept that society or the
    universe is analogous to a biological organism,
    as in development or organization.

5
Durkheims Basic Assumptions Reflect the Views of
the Organicists
  • 1) Society was to be viewed as an entity in
    itself that can be distinguished from and is not
    reducible to its constituent parts. Analytic
    priority is given to the whole.
  • 2) Durkheim gave causal priority to the whole-
    system parts fulfill the needs and requirements
    of the whole.
  • 3) The frequent use of the notion functional
    needs is buttressed by Durkheims
    conceptualization of social systems as normal
    and pathological states.
  • 4) When we view systems as normal and
    pathological, as well as by functions, the
    additional implication is that systems have
    equilibrium points around which normal
    functioning occurs.

6
The Hedge
  • When, then, the explanation of social phenomenon
    is undertaken, we must seek separately the
    efficient cause which produces it and the
    function it fulfills. We use the word function
    in preference to end or purpose, precisely
    because social phenomena do not generally exist
    for the useful results they produce. Durkheim,
    1895

7
Durkheim on Society
  • "Social life comes from a double source, the
    likeness of consciences and the division of
    social labor."Every aggregate of individuals
    who are in continuous contact form a society.
  • The interests of the individual are not those of
    the group he belongs to and, indeed, there is
    often a real antagonism between one and the
    other... There should be...a code of rules that
    lays down for the individual what he should do so
    as not to damage collective interests and so as
    not to disorganize the society of which he forms
    a part.

8
Society is Prior to the Individual
  • 1) We are all born into pre-existing societies.
    We learn values, norms and expected behaviors.
  • 2) At any one moment in time, a societys ways of
    acting, thinking, and feeling exist independently
    of any one person. A pattern of behavior that
    expresses values and norms will continue if some
    or even many members of a society are ignorant
    about how to act or are rebelling by purposely
    acting in a deviant way.

9
Durkheim on Socialization
  • Is what glues society together.
  • Two Levels of Socialization
  • Regulation
  • Integration

10
Regulation
  • Institutional levels of socialization perform the
    process of regulation.
  • Society controls our animal appetites by
    giving us a sense of duty and clear guidance
    about what goals to seek and the proper means to
    follow in seeking our goals. Hornsby P. 90

11
Different Institutions in Modern Societies
Regulate Individuals Through One or More of the
Following Mechanisms
  • 1) Defining Moral Rules
  • 2) Communicating and clarifying Moral Rules
  • 3) Enforcing Moral Rules

12
Integration
  • Refers to the level of socialization that occurs
    in the everyday life experiences of interacting
    in groups. Integration depends on the level and
    quality of group activity.
  • Collective activity- reinforces over and over
    again strong social ties, shared beliefs, values
    and norms, and shared emotions that let members
    feel duty and attachment to the group.

13
  • A Collective Consciousness- Moral Unity can only
    be attained if All members of society share
    common sets of symbolic representations and
    common assumptions about the world around them.
  • If you lack these things, the society will
    degenerate and decay.

14
Durkheims Typology of Normal Versus Pathological
States of Social Groups
15
Understanding Anomie
  • Normlessness in a whole society or in some of its
    component groups. It is not a state of mind, but
    a property of the social structure. The desires
    of individuals are no longer being regulated by
    social norms, and as a consequence individuals
    lack moral guidance in pursuit of their goals.
  • Any rapid movement in the social structure that
    upsets previous networks in which lifestyles are
    embedded carries with it a chance of anomie.

16
Egoism
  • When one becomes detached form society. In this
    case, the norms still exist, but one has become
    detached from them.

17
Using Hornsbys Example-
  • What are the mechanisms for regulation in
    electronic gatherings?
  • Is integration facilitated through electronic
    gatherings? What are the mechanisms for
    integration in Electronic Gatherings?

18
The Social Fact
  • The social structures, cultural norms and values
    that are external to and coercive of actors.
  • Social Facts must be treated as things.
  • They should be studied empirically, not
    philosophically.

19
Understanding Social Facts
  • A social fact is identifiable through the power
    of external coercion which it exerts or is
    capable of exerting upon individuals.
  • Indeed the fact which have provided us with its
    basis are all ways of functioning they are
    physiological in nature. But there are also
    collective ways of being, namely, social facts of
    an anatomical or morphological nature.
  • A social fact is any way of acting, whether
    fixed or not, capable of exerting over the
    individual an external constraint
  • Which is general over the whole of a given
    society whilst having an existence of its own,
    independent of its individual manifestations.

20
The Evolution of his Ideas
  • Early in his work the social fact is defined by
    exteriority and constraint. Later in his career,
    the social fact evolved. He came to see it as an
    effective guide and control of conduct only to
    the extent that they become internalized in the
    consciousness of individuals, while continuing to
    exist independently of individuals. Constraint
    evolves from a simple imposition of outside
    controls on individual will, to a moral
    obligation to obey the rule.

21
Levels of Social Reality Material Versus
Non-Material Social Facts
  • Material Social Facts
  • Society
  • Structural Components of society (church, state)
  • Morphological components of society (populations
    distribution, channels of communication, housing
    arrangements)
  • Non-Material Social Facts
  • Morality
  • Collective Conscience
  • Collective Representations
  • Social Currents

22
The Significance of the Social Fact
  • The significance of the social fact is that it
    defined an area of study for sociology. It set
    it apart from biological and psychological
    studies of society.

23
Durkheims Central Research Question
  • How are societies Created and sustained over
    time?
  • Problem of social solidarity

24
Understanding Social Solidarity
  • Takes different forms in different historical
    periods and varies in strength from group to
    group, even in the same society.
  • It (social solidarity) is not the same in the
    family and in political societies we are not
    attached to our country in the same fashion as
    the Roman was to his city or the German to his
    tribe. Durkheim, 1893/1933 p. 66)

25
Social Phenomena
  • Social phenomena arise when interacting
    individuals constitute a reality that can no
    longer be accounted for in terms of the
    properties of individual actors.
  • Group properties are independent of individual
    traits.

26
The Division of Labor in Society
  • Social Solidarity take on two forms.
  • Mechanic Solidarity
  • Organic Solidarity

27
Mechanical Solidarity
  • Social cohesion based upon the likeness and
    similarities among individuals in a society.
  • It is largely dependent on common rituals and
    routines. Common among prehistoric and
    pre-agricultural societies, and lessens in
    predominance as modernity increases.
  • Are small, simple. For example, traditional
    villages are composed of households organized in
    a similar manner. Each household fulfills the
    same wide range of economic, educational,
    familial, and religious functions as do the other
    households.

28
Durkheim on Mechanical Solidarity
  • "In societies where this type of solidarity
    mechanical is highly developed, the individual
    is not his own master...Solidarity is, literally
    something which the society possesses.
  • "There is then, a social structure of determined
    nature to which mechanical solidarity
    corresponds. What characterizes it is a system of
    segments homogeneous and similar to each other.
    Quite different is the structure of societies
    where organic solidarity is preponderant. They
    are constituted, not by a repitition of similar,
    homogeneous segments, but by a system of
    different organs each of which has a special
    role, and which are themselves formed of
    differentiated parts."

29
Organic Solidarity
  • Social cohesion based upon the dependence
    individuals in more advanced society have on each
    other. Though individuals perform different tasks
    and often have different values and interests,
    the order and very survival of society depends on
    their reliance on each other to perform their
    specific task.
  • These societies are complex, composed of
    specialized parts. No one household,
    neighborhood, town, or company can produce
    everything its members need to survive.
    Moreover, the economy depends on the family and
    educational institutions to produce dependable
    workers with a range of needed skills.
  • Hence there is a high degree of economic
    interdependence

30
Durkheim on Organic Solidarity
  • In one case as in the other, the structure
    derives from the division of labor and its
    solidarity. Each part of the animal, having
    become an organ, has its proper sphere of action
    where it moves independently without imposing
    itself upon others. But, from another point of
    view, they depend more upon one another than in a
    colony, since they cannot separate without
    perishing."
  • "...Even where society relies most completely
    upon the division of labor, it does not become a
    jumble of juxtaposed atoms, between which it can
    establish only external, transient contacts.
    Rather the members are united by ties which
    extend deeper and far beyond the short moments
    during which the exchange is made. Each of the
    functions that they exercise is, in a fixed way,
    dependent upon others, and with them forms a
    solidarity system."

31
What Determines if a Society is Mechanical or
Organic?
  • -1) The extent of the division of labor
  • -2) The extent to which members of a society
    share a collective consciousness (ways of
    thinking or feeling that are common to the group)
  • The greater the degree of specialization, the
    lower the collective consciousness

32
What Explains the Transition from Mechanic to
Organic Solidarity
  • Dynamic Density- refers to the number of people
    in a society and the amount of interaction that
    occurs among them. Neither population increase
    nor an increase in interaction, when taken
    separately, is a significant factor in societal
    change.
  • An increase in numbers of people and an increase
    in the interaction among them lead to the change
    from mechanical to organic solidarity because
    together they bring about more competition for
    scarce resources and a more intense struggle for
    survival among the various parallel and similar
    components of primitive society.

33
Law and Solidarity
  • Mechanical Solidarity- is characterized by
    repressive law. Because people are similar they
    tend to believe very strongly in a common
    morality, any offense against their shared value
    system is likely to be of significant importance
    to most individuals.
  • Organic Solidarity- is characterized by
    Restitutive Law- instead of being severely
    punished for even seemingly minor offenses
    against the collective morality, individuals in
    more modern type of society are likely simply to
    be asked to comply with the law or to repay- make
    restitution.

34
Collective Consciousness
  • The totality of beliefs and sentiments common to
    average citizens of the same society forms a
    determinate system which has its own life one
    may call it the collective or common
    conscience... It is, thus, an entirely different
    thing from particular consciences, although it
    can be realized only through them. Durkheim,
    1893

35
Collective Representation
  • Specific states, or substrata of the collective
    Conscience. Collective representations are
    norms, values of specific collectivities such as
    the family, occupations, states, educational,
    religious institutions.

36
Two Types of Societies
37
Two Empirical Examples
  • Suicide
  • The Elementary Forms of Religious Life

38
Why Suicide?
  • He chose to study suicide because it was
  • Concrete
  • Specific
  • Had good data available
  • Seen as a private and personal act and if he
    could show social causes it would legitimize a
    wider area of study for the new field.

39
Durkheim on Suicide
  • Each social group has a collective inclination
    for the act, quite its own and the source of all
    individual inclination rather than their result.
    It is made up of currents of egoism, altruism or
    anomy running through... society... These
    tendencies of the whole social body, by affecting
    individuals, cause them to commit suicide. 1897

40
The Four Types of Suicide
  • Egoistic
  • Altruistic
  • Anomic
  • Fatalistic

41
Four Types of Suicide
  • When Integration is too low, Egoistic suicide is
    more likely.
  • When Integration is too high, Altruistic suicide
    is more likely.
  • When Regulation is too low, Anomic suicide is
    more likely.
  • When Regulation is too high, Fatalistic suicide
    is more likely.

42
The Elementary Forms of Religious Life- 1912
  • There can be no society that does not experience
    the need at regular intervals to maintain and
    strengthen the collective feelings and ideas that
    provide its coherence and its distinct
    individuality. This moral remaking can be
    achieved only through meetings, assemblies, and
    congregations in which the individuals, pressing
    close to one another, reaffirm in common their
    common sentiments. p. 429 1912
  • A religion is a unified system of beliefs and
    practices which unite into one single moral
    community called a Church, all those who adhere
    to them.

43
Why Study Religion?
  • Religion was one of the forces that created
    within individuals a sense of moral obligation to
    adhere to societys demands.
  • He saw religion as a mechanism that might serve
    to bolster a threatened social order.
  • Religion took people from everyday concerns to
    experiencing a common devotion.

44
The Sacred and the Profane
  • Society creates religion through the definition
    of certain phenomena as sacred (set apart), or
    forbidden. The rest is deemed profane, ordinary,
    everyday, utilitarian, mundane.

45
The Development of the Sacred Requires Three
Other Conditions for the Development of Religion
  • 1) Development of a set of religious beliefs.
    These beliefs are the representations which
    express the nature of sacred things and the
    relations which they sustain, either with each
    other or with profane things
  • 2) A set of religious rites is necessary.
  • 3) A church or a single overarching moral
    community

46
A New Religion
  • We must discover the rational substitutes for
    these religious notions that for a long time have
    served as the vehicle for the most essential
    moral ideas. Durkheim, the Elementary Forms of
    Religious Life p. 44
  • New religions can replace the older modes.

47
Critique
  • The focus on the function of a part for the
    social whole as always being examined sometimes
    results in teleological reasoning. (The systems
    parts function to maintain the system. Hence
    each part exists because it is required for the
    functioning of the system).

48
Causal and functional statements sometimes become
fused in his arguments.
  • In the Division of Labor
  • Population density leads to moral density is his
    cause.
  • Integration of society is his function.
  • Population density increases moral density moral
    density leads to competition (threat to social
    order). Competition for resources leads to
    specialization specialization creates mutual
    obligation. Does this mean a threat to the
    social order caused the division of labor?

49
Hornsbys Cyborg Society
  • What is Hornsbys Hypothesis?
  • Be sure to define key terms
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