An Outline of the Social System.ppt
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1、“An Outline of the Social System”,Talcott Parsons, 1951,Talcott Parsons,Born December 13, 1902 in Colorado Springs, CO his father was a Congregational minister and active in the social reform movement known as the Social Gospel movement. Relatively little information about him before he went to Amhe
2、rst Graduated from Amherst College with a major in biology, leisure and tourism, and philosophy. Went to London School of Economics (LSE). Reputation for intellectual excellence and a radical political stance on the part of many of its staff grounding in sociology Met wife Helen Walker married to fo
3、r whole life,continue Parsons,WWII important lag time for Parsons - the deaths of his elder brother and of both parents between 1940 and 1943 seem to have played a part in what he thought of “as a major failure of his career-the inability to complete a major monographic study of medical practice at
4、that time, based on his empirical work” University of Heidelberg with Ph.D. in sociology and economics Most works influences by time spent with the Program in Social Relations (1946) 1949 elected president of the American Sociological Association Very prominent American Sociologist teaching at Harva
5、rd In 1953/4 Parsons traveled to England - visiting chair of social theory at Cambridge. He was asked to give the annual Marshall Lectures that academic year, with the theme of the relations between economic and sociological theory Died May 8, 1979,Structural Functionalism and Ideas,Main focus Struc
6、tural Functionalism Social Systems/Institutions subsystems, roles, the normative order, and the interpretation of situations by social actors Pattern Variables Gratification/discipline actors emotional involvement Private/collective needs to individual or wider population Universalism/particularism
7、action to particular person Achievement/ascription interaction and achievements Specificity/diffuseness range of roles an actor has Society Breakdown Cultural system symbols for expressions Personality system unique identity Social system modes of interactions between actors,Sociocultural Evolutioni
8、sm,The change in cultures and societies over time Provides models for understanding relationship between technologies, social structure, the values of society, and how/why changes occur over time. Mechanisms of variation and social change,Then how does a society maintain itself?,AGIL & subsystems of
9、 action,A - The function of adaptation. Adaptation is another consequence of goal plurality. With providing additional disposable facilities independent of their relevance to any particular goal. G - The function of goal-attainment. Goal-attainment becomes a problem in so far as there arises some di
10、screpancy between the inertial tendencies of the system and its needs resulting from interchange with the situation. I - The function of integration. In the control hierarchy, integration stands between the functions of pattern-maintennce and goal-attainment. The system as a whole is concerned most
11、with the allocation of rights and obligations. L - The function of pattern maintenance. The function of pattern maintenance refers to the imperative of maintaining the stability of patterns of institutionalized culture defining the structure of the system.,Advocate of “grand theory,“ an attempt to i
12、ntegrate all the social sciences into an overarching theoretical framework Most influential works: The Structure of Social Action (1937) The Social System (1951) Early work The Structure of Social Action (1937) inspired by work from Max Weber, Vilfredo Pareto, and Emile Durkheim Main goal: “action t
13、heory” human action is voluntary, intentional, and symbolic Pattern variablesTodays Readings focused on early developing theories and Social Systems,Parsonss Works,The Structure of Social Action (1937) The Social System (1951) Economy and Society - with N. Smelser (1956) Structure and Process in Mod
14、ern Societies (1960) Societies: Evolutionary and Comparative Perspectives (1966) Sociological Theory and Modern Society (1968) Politics and Social Structure (1969) The American University - with G. Platt (1973) Social Systems and the Evolution of Action Theory (1977) Action Theory and the Human Cond
15、ition (1978),“The Position of Sociological Theory” (1948),Five important postulates:Must be recognized as fundamentally important to any science. Must have social systems. Must conform to the “structural-functional” type. Must be formulated within an “action” frame of reference Must be framed in ter
16、ms of genuinely operational concepts.,1. Fundamental Importance,Some of the highest levels of scientific development need the theoretic system in order to conceptualize ideasWhen people recognize fundamental importance, social science will mature and have more “predictive power” in the science realm
17、,2. Social Systems,“theoretical scheme which articulates our own field with others which are equally part of the same broader fundamental system.”,3. “Structural-Functional” Type,Does not currently fit the analytical mechanics, but this is most desired state because it would cover a wider range of e
18、mpirical analysis (Pareto)“by use of structural categories it simplifies dynamic problems to the point where a significant proportion of them became empirically manageable with the observational and analytical resources we can hope to command in the near future”,4. “Action” Frame of Reference,CANNOT
19、 be completely behavioristic Excluding point-of-view of actor Essential in order to understand the foundation of “motivational categories,” which include: attitudes, sentiments, goals, complexes, etc.,5. Genuinely Operational Concepts,“have theoretical categories of such a character that the empiric
20、al values of the variables concerned are the immediate products of our observational procedures” Currently approach is not possible for most fields of social sciences,Methodological Prerequisites of the Formulation of a System,1. Analysis of the action frame of reference Actor vs. Situation Not phys
21、ical or biological “Analysis of the situation must be fully integrated with the analysis of the action itself” Three fundamental modes of orientation: cognitive, goal directed, and affective.,2. The functional prerequisites of the social system System of social action involving a “plurality of inter
22、acting individuals” Two primary foci: Coordinating activities so that they do not negatively affect each other and contribute into the system Adequacy of motivation,3. The bases of structure in social systems Stable patterns between actors or roles and social relationships Important aspects: Institu
23、tionalization Differentiation,Importance of Institutions,Structural differentiation and integration patterns Dynamic interrelationships of institutions and culture Motivation of institutional behavior Motivation of deviant behavior/social control concerns Dynamic theory of institutional change,Funct
24、ional differentiation,structured units acquire specialized significance in the functioning of the system social interaction is bound to the physical task performance of individuals in a physical environment; it is bound to spatial location in the physical sense spatial location is the community aspe
25、ct of social structure, which can be broken down into four complexes residential location and the social structure around it functional task-performance through occupation, and its locational problems jurisdictional application of normative order through the specification of categories and persons,
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