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THE SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Core Document in this Module
Training Handout
Some things vary according to how you look at them
INTRODUCTION: A Matter of How You Look at It
In many ways, sociology is the study of things we see in
every day life, but that
we do not see in the same way.. This is a
characteristic of many sciences.
We talk, for example, of the "sun
coming up every morning," or "going down every evening."
The science of astronomy, however,
taught us long ago that the world is not flat and not the centre of the
universe, but is a globe turning on its axis and, as it turns, it only
appears that the sun is coming up or going down: it is not.
When we look around
us and see walls and/or objects, we see them a solid things.
Nuclear physics, however, teaches
us that what we see as solid, continuous matter, consists mainly
of nothing.
Empty space.
It is mainly atomic nuclei surrounded
by vacuum, around which a few things such as electrons buzz.
In relative sizes,
it is like a fly on a football field.
With the limited ability of our eyes,
we look at those millions of nuclei and electrons, and see solid
matter.
Empiricists are people who say we
can understand only things we can observe, that we do not need theory to
interpret those things.
Astronomy, nuclear physics, and sociology
teach us that we need perspective before we can see things
––
that raw observations can not in themselves lead to
understanding.
In everyday life, we
may think of society of consisting of people.
In sociology, society is not people.
Individual persons carry society
in their beliefs and actions (and interactions), but are not society in
themselves.
Society is a system of beliefs and
actions carried by human beings, but it is something which transcends those
same carriers.
That means, then, that social organisations,
such as family or community, are not people.
They are systems, or patterns, of
beliefs and actions, by people, which are carried by people.
This is not to say we can define
society (or social institutions) any way we want, or see it in any way
we personally wish.
Sociology is a discipline,
and it takes discipline to understand it.
For those involved in applied sociology,
interventions that will affect families or communities.
It is necessary to understand sociology..
That means to be able to understand the sociological perspective.
Society is in the eye
of the beholder.
TREES AND FOREST
There is an old proverb,
saying that we, "Can not see the forest for the trees."
We can apply this idea
to the sociological perspective.
The proverb implies that a forest
is large, too large to see all at once, and up close, all we can see is
trees.
We may be seeing part of the forest,
but that does not give us a good understanding of the forest as
a whole.In everyday life, we
come into contact with other people.
We can see them; we
can (usually) talk with them.
Sometimes we can touch
them (but we have to be careful where).
We can not see a society, a community
or a family, and we can not touch a society, a community or a
family.
Even if we were to take an aeroplane
up into the sky we could not see a forest, because it is an ecosystem,
and includes all the interactions between the soil, the plants, the animals
and the air in that system.
It is far more than a collection of trees.
So too a society.
It does not consist of people (that
we can see), but of beliefs and actions, and is a system; there is no physical
position from which we can see a society.
Families and communities are social
organisations, and are therefore something other than the individuals in
them.
AN ATOMISTIC PERSPECTIVE
We can use the word "atomistic" to
indicate a non sociological (or anti-sociological) perspective.
From what we know about atoms, which
tend to stick together, perhaps it is not the best word coined.
It implies that people are separate
individuals and that there is nothing beyond the individual.
I would say that the best illustration
of an atomistic perspective is a quote from Margaret Thatcher, a right
wing conservative prime minister of the UK.
She said, "There is no such thing as society; there are only individuals."
So long as you do not believe that
society exists, you will not see it, nor is it likely that will you be able to have any influence
on its organisation or direction of change and growth.
One way to compare differences in
perspective is to observe a game of competition such as poker.
The players are focused
on winning, and on competing with each other.
For them, that competition affects
their perspective, and they see the competition as the most important element
of the game.
If we are standing by, we can also
see there is a considerable amount of co-operation in the game.
Shared values and shared
meanings are manifested in that co-operation.
There is agreement, for example,
about the value of each card, and that a three is higher than a
two.
Most of these agreements are unspoken
and taken for granted, which contributes to them not being at the forefront
of consciousness or awareness of the players.
See Poker Game
In a similar way, in society, "players"
in games such as "marketing" may see the competition more easily than the
underlying ground rules and shared meanings.
Margaret Thatcher, a declared champion
of corporations and private enterprise, had a perspective that magnified
the competition and overlooked the co-operation.
THREE CLASSICAL SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
In the history and development of
sociology, three separate perspectives were created and elaborated.
They all owe their origins to thinking
about applying the scientific method to the study of society in the middle
and late nineteenth century.
Karl Marx, who never called himself
a sociologist, was concerned with the underlying competition
between resources.
He concentrated on the differences
between the class of people who owned the factors of production, the bourgeoisie,
and the class of people who had only their labour to sell in return for
survival, the proletariat.
From his analysis has grown the perspective
in sociology which we now call "Conflict.".
The dynamics and changes in society are linked to various conflicts.
See Karl Marx
Emile Durkheim took a different approach.
He argued that we can look at rates
of behaviour and find explanations outside the individuals who are doing
the acting.
He saw some sort of a conscience
which acted as if it were external to individuals even though it was carried
in the thoughts of individuals.
He argued, in contrast to Marx, that
various characteristics of social elements contribute to the living and
growing of society and its institutions.
This idea is carried through today
as the "Functionalist" perspective in sociology. See
Durkheim
Max Weber also disagreed
with Marx, but went in a different direction.
He said we can not understand society
unless we understand the meanings that people put on their actions and
beliefs.
He argued that the industrial revolution
was caused by a shift in values and beliefs associated with the ideas of
John Calvin and the Protestant Reformation.
From his analysis is derived the
third main sociological perspective, "Symbolic Interaction."
See
Weber
For
over a century, sociologists have fought great battles based on these three
radically different ways of perceiving society.
Sometimes those battles are echoed in debates today.
Like the famous feuding pair of Appalachian
extended families, the Hatfields and McCoys, the battles have been now
put to rest, and there is much effort put in finding ways to reconcile
them.
I support the idea that all three
are valuable, and we should try to internalize them as merely different
ways of looking at the same things.
See the story of the
Blind
Men and the Elephant.
In each of the historical or classical
perspectives, the intent is to justify or use a sociological
approach.
Social behaviour is not explained
by psychological theories, nor is it a product of genetic inheritance.
(That is called "reductionism").
FEMINIST SOCIOLOGY
While some people have tried to call
Feminist Sociology a fourth perspective, the practitioners themselves use
all three of the historical perspectives in their analyses.
While there are inequities and inequalities
based upon sex, these are similar to those based upon age or race.
Biological differences in people
(age, race, sex)
are extrapolated by people who make social assumptions about each
of them.
These are important
topics in sociology, but are not separate perspectives.
Search
for: Harriet Martineau.
Sociology borrows terminology from linguistics here.
Biological (genetically inherited)
differences between males and females are called differences in
"sex."
Sociological differences (transmitted
and stored by symbols) between masculine and feminine are called differences
in "
gender."
CULTURAL DIMENSIONS
If we define culture and society
as the sum total of everything we learn, then it is useful to identify
six dimensions of culture or society.
In mathematics we define
three dimensions as height, width and depth.
(Some mathematicians have added time as fourth).
These are analytical
constructs, and do not exist in themselves in empirical
reality.
I find that many of the perspectives
and theories can be better understood by using the concept of
dimensions.
As in mathematics,
these are constructs which exist in the minds of the observers.
In mathematics, if we remove any
one dimension, say height, then, by definition and analysis,
the whole object disappears.
So too with the social or cultural
dimensions.
They are technological, economic,
political, institutional (or interactional), values and beliefs.
These are not simply aspects of society, but dimensions.
If any one is removed, all six are removed.
They all extend from the broad sweep
of the whole of humanity and macro theories, to micro sociology and the
local interaction between as few as two people.
These are described
in more detail in "What
is Community?"
CONCLUSION
The sociological study
of society is an interesting and challenging adventure.
For the pure scientist, it reveals
more about how things work, and sociological perspectives give us immense
insight into social phenomena.
For the applied social scientist,
especially one considering interventions into families, communities, or
organisations, the social perspectives provide very valuable material to
understanding those institutions, and predicting what things may result
from those interventions.
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A Training Session:
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