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| William
Ogburn saw three processes of social change: innovation, discovery and
diffusion. |
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| He
saw the main driver of social change as the technology of a culture but,
unlike Marx, did not see it necessarily as a result of relations of production. |
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| In
our description of the six dimensions of culture, we have put the technological
dimension at the bottom as a foundation. |
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| New
technology tends to be less threatening as might be innovations or introductions
in the other five dimensions. |
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| It
is easier to introduce a transistor radio to an isolated community than
to introduce a new language, a new belief system, a new way of distributing
wealth, or new values. |
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| That
introduction of a transistor radio, however, will have considerable repercussions
in all six dimensions of culture, thus social change. |
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| Was
agriculture invented or discovered? |
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| Perhaps
the most important discovery or invention in the history of homo sapiens,
was the process of controlling food production, by the domestication of
herd animals and planting of seeds or shoots to reproduce food bearing
plants. |
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| Domestication
of dogs took place much earlier, and the dog became another tool for hunters,
along with spears and other hunting weapons. |
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| Dogs
perhaps started by hanging around hunting camps, and a symbiosis developed
to their mutual benefit. |
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| The
herding of cattle, including cows sheep and goats, other animals in Asia
and the Americas, was a big jump. |
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| This
involved the protection of the herd animals from predators, which humans
could do with their hunting tools. |
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| Humans
had binocular vision, perhaps developed when their primate ancestors lived
in trees, so were better at judging distance, which cattle could not. |
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| It
also involved the controlling of mating and reproduction, and therefore
selective breeding, to emphasise physical traits that the humans wanted
among the cattle. |
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| Perhaps
men first domesticated herd animals, but the jury is still out. |
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| The
planting of seeds and shoots to control the timing and location of food
bearing plants, and subsequent elaboration, adding water and/or fertiliser,
removing weeds, inventing means of storage, all these contributed to mankind’s
biggest revolution, the agrarian surplus. |
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| Was
this invented or discovered? |
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| Prior
to plant domestication, plants reproduced by seeds, which were distributed
by wind, water and animals. |
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| A
berry would be eaten, its seeds passed unchanged through the digestive
system of the animal, then being planted and fertilised in the same operation. |
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| It
is likely that humans observed this process and thought to control the
planting. |
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| This
was most likely done by women while the men were away hunting or herding
animals |
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| There
can be a fine line between two of Ogburn’s processes, innovation and
discovery |
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| When
different communities contact each other, they usually begin sharing or
copying each other’s technology. See The Incest
Taboo. |
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| This
is the basis of diffusion. |
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| Sometimes
a technique was jealously guarded by one community, and that often stimulated
much curiosity and coveting in the other community, and its members would
go to great lengths to uncover that technique. |
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| The
result was that any innovation or discovery, if useful, would be passed
along from community to community, thus diffusion. |
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| Once
a change in technology is introduced in a community, then adaptations take
place in all six cultural dimensions of that
community. |
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| Any
change that falls behind in adapting to the first change, in Ogburn’s
terms, was cultural lag. |
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