Transcript Chapter 4

Society
People who interact in a defined
territory and share culture
Visions of Society
Four diverse perspectives on what accounts
for social change and societal evolution
• Gerhard Lenski
– Society and technology
• Karl Marx
– Society in conflict
• Max Weber
– The power of ideas shapes society
• Emile Durkheim
– How traditional and modern societies
hang together
Gerhard Lenski
• Sociocultural evolution–The changes that
occur as a society gains new technology
• Societies range from simple to the
technologically complex.
• Societies simple in technology tend to
resemble one another.
• More technologically complex societies
reveal striking cultural diversity.
Sociocultural Evolution
• Technology shapes other cultural
patterns. Simple technology can only
support small numbers of people who live
simple lives.
• The greater amount of technology a
society has within its grasp, the faster
cultural change will take place.
• High-tech societies are capable of
sustaining large numbers of people who
are engaged in a diverse division of labor.
Global Map 4.1
High Technology in Global Perspective
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
• Hunting and gathering
– The use of simple tools to hunt animals and gather vegetation
• Horticultural and pastoral
– Horticulture–The use of hand tools to raise crops
– Pastoralism–The domestication of animals
• Agriculture/Agrarian
– Large-scale cultivation using plows harnessed to animals or more
powerful energy sources
• Industrialism
– The production of goods using advanced sources of energy to
drive large machinery
• Postindustrialism
– The production of information using computer technology
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
Hunting and gathering
 Earliest and simplest of all
societies on earth
 Nomadic
 Have only a dozen or so
members
 Built around family
 Consider men and women to be
equals
 http://www.papuatrekking.com/
Korowai_Kombai.html
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
Horticultural and
Pastoral
• More food so more people into
the hundreds
• Greater specialization of work
• Increasing presence of social
inequality
• Developed over 12,000 years
ago as people raised animals
instead of hunting them and
created hand tools for crop
raising
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
Agrarian
• Developed about 5,000
years ago as plows or
other energy sources
allowed for large scale
food prod.
• Expanded into empires
• Greater specialization with
distinct occupations
• Extreme social inequality
• Women start to lose
importance
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
Industrial
• Developed in Europe 250 years
ago as energy was harnessed to
drive machinery
• Provides modern conveniences
and advanced comm. and tech.
• Moves work from home to
factory
• Reduces importance of trad.
Family
• Raises living standard
Lenski’s Five Types Of Societies
Post-Industrial
• The most recent state of tech.
Advancement that caters to an
inform.-based economy
• Shift from heavy industries to
computers and information
systems
• Requires people with
information-skills; i.e. comp.
Programmers
• Driving force behind the
Information Revolution, flow of
info. that caters to the emerging
global culture
Is Society Improving?
Are Societies Improving?
• Gerhard Lenski: Modern technology
offers expanded human choice, but leaves
us with new sets of dangers.
• Karl Marx: Social conflict would only end
once production of goods and services
were taken out of the hands of the
capitalists and placed into the hands of
all people.
Are Societies Improving?
• Max Weber: Saw socialism as a greater
evil than capitalism, as large, alienating
bureaucracies would gain even more
control over people.
• Emile Durkheim: Optimistic about
modernity and the possibility of more
freedom for individuals, but concerned
about the dangers of anomic feelings.