The Founders of Sociology
Each field of academic study has its own cast of characters,
and sociology is no exception. Although countless individuals have contributed
to sociology's development into a social science, several individuals deserve
special mention.
Auguste Comte
The French philosopher Auguste Comte (1798–1857)—often
called the “father of sociology”—first used the term “sociology” in 1838 to
refer to the scientific study of society. He believed that all societies
develop and progress through the following stages: religious, metaphysical, and
scientific. Comte argued that society needs scientific knowledge based on facts
and evidence to solve its problems—not speculation and superstition, which
characterize the religious and metaphysical stages of social development. Comte
viewed the science of sociology as consisting of two branches: dynamics, or the
study of the processes by which societies change; and statics, or the study of
the processes by which societies endure. He also envisioned sociologists as
eventually developing a base of scientific social knowledge that would guide
society into positive directions.
Herbert Spencer
The 19th‐century Englishman Herbert Spencer (1820–1903)
compared society to a living organism with interdependent parts. Change in one
part of society causes change in the other parts, so that every part
contributes to the stability and survival of society as a whole. If one part of
society malfunctions, the other parts must adjust to the crisis and contribute
even more to preserve society. Family, education, government, industry, and
religion comprise just a few of the parts of the “organism” of society.
Spencer suggested that society will correct its own defects
through the natural process of “survival of the fittest.” The societal
“organism” naturally leans toward homeostasis, or balance and stability. Social
problems work themselves out when the government leaves society alone. The
“fittest”—the rich, powerful, and successful—enjoy their status because nature
has “selected” them to do so. In contrast, nature has doomed the “unfit”—the
poor, weak, and unsuccessful—to failure. They must fend for themselves without
social assistance if society is to remain healthy and even progress to higher
levels. Governmental interference in the “natural” order of society weakens
society by wasting the efforts of its leadership in trying to defy the laws of
nature.
Karl Marx
Not everyone has shared Spencer's vision of societal harmony
and stability. Chief among those who disagreed was the German political
philosopher and economist Karl Marx (1818–1883), who observed society's
exploitation of the poor by the rich and powerful. Marx argued that Spencer's
healthy societal “organism” was a falsehood. Rather than interdependence and
stability, Marx claimed that social conflict, especially class conflict, and
competition mark all societies.
The class of capitalists that Marx called the bourgeoisie
particularly enraged him. Members of the bourgeoisie own the means of
production and exploit the class of laborers, called the proletariat, who do
not own the means of production. Marx believed that the very natures of the
bourgeoisie and the proletariat inescapably lock the two classes in conflict.
But he then took his ideas of class conflict one step further: He predicted
that the laborers are not selectively “unfit,” but are destined to overthrow
the capitalists. Such a class revolution would establish a “class‐free” society
in which all people work according to their abilities and receive according to
their needs.
Unlike Spencer, Marx believed that economics, not natural
selection, determines the differences between the bourgeoisie and the
proletariat. He further claimed that a society's economic system decides
peoples' norms, values, mores, and religious beliefs, as well as the nature of
the society's political, governmental, and educational systems. Also unlike
Spencer, Marx urged people to take an active role in changing society rather
than simply trusting it to evolve positively on its own.
Emile Durkheim
Despite their differences, Marx, Spencer, and Comte all
acknowledged the importance of using science to study society, although none
actually used scientific methods. Not until Emile Durkheim (1858–1917) did a
person systematically apply scientific methods to sociology as a discipline. A
French philosopher and sociologist, Durkheim stressed the importance of
studying social facts, or patterns of behavior characteristic of a particular
group. The phenomenon of suicide especially interested Durkheim. But he did not
limit his ideas on the topic to mere speculation. Durkheim formulated his
conclusions about the causes of suicide based on the analysis of large amounts
of statistical data collected from various European countries.
Durkheim certainly advocated the use of systematic
observation to study sociological events, but he also recommended that
sociologists avoid considering people's attitudes when explaining society.
Sociologists should only consider as objective “evidence” what they themselves
can directly observe. In other words, they must not concern themselves with
people's subjective experiences.
Max Weber
The German sociologist Max Weber (1864–1920) disagreed with
the “objective evidence only” position of Durkheim. He argued that sociologists
must also consider people's interpretations of events—not just the events
themselves. Weber believed that individuals' behaviors cannot exist apart from
their interpretations of the meaning of their own behaviors, and that people
tend to act according to these interpretations. Because of the ties between
objective behavior and subjective interpretation, Weber believed that
sociologists must inquire into people's thoughts, feelings, and perceptions
regarding their own behaviors. Weber recommended that sociologists adopt his
method of Verstehen (vûrst e hen), or empathetic understanding. Verstehen
allows sociologists to mentally put themselves into “the other person's shoes”
and thus obtain an “interpretive understanding” of the meanings of individuals'
behaviors.
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