Sanskar Module 1 Notes
Sanskar Module 1 Notes
MODULE – 1
• Defined Sociology as “The study of social facts which are the collec2ve ways of feeling, thinking,
and ac2ng.”
On Own:
Contributors of sociology
St Simon (1760-1825)
His Pupil
• In the same line he gave “Posi2ve Philosophy” (3 vol, book), I.e. law of three stages.
It is very old and most primi5ve stage, in these individuals believed that everything that happened was the
will of God. Human beings believed that behind every occurrence there is supernatural power.
• Animism: refers to the belief that non-human en55es are spiritual beings, either intrinsically or
because spirits inhabit them for a period of 5me. (Firstly, humans worship nature, spirits, ghosts)
• Polytheism: It is the belief in more than one god, people created names of mul5ple gods, Hinduism
and Greek mythology can be an example of this.
• Monotheism: It is the belief in one God oneness of God this was a journey to one singular god,
Chris5anity and Islam is the example of this.
In this stage people believed in God however they do not explain everything which happens in the society
was the will of God and most problem took place due to the inadequacy of humans.
Stage 3, Posi7ve/Scien7fic Stage: In this stage every social phenomenon was explained by the scien5fic
findings and empirical research.
• This stage was going to remain forever science is going to be the supreme.
• Scien5sts/Researchers: Superior. The religious head is there but is not supreme.
Posi7vism: According to Comte, Posi5vism is absolutely intellectual way to determine social phenomenon,
there is no place for supernatural power in it. In this stage religion became less predominant and scien5fic
methods became more predominant in obtaining knowledge.
• Focused on: Methodology of Study, Usage of Science for Study of Society, E.g. Test, Verifica5on &
Lack of Human Error.
• Auguste Comte and Durkheim applied empiricism to the social sciences, claiming that society can be
studied like nature and that the rules of social existence can be shown using natural science
techniques like observa5on, categoriza5on, evalua5on, experimenta5on, and sta5s5cs.
It refers to using empirical techniques in scien5fic inquiry. It is a way of thinking about knowledge that
says the only way to know anything is through direct experience through the senses.
Auguste Comte divided sociology into two major parts, namely, sta5c and dynamic sociology. The idea of
this division is borrowed from biology, which is in keeping with his no5ons of a hierarchy of sciences.
1. Social StaOc
• Stable/Permanent; Does not change
• It is sta5c in all parts of 5mes of society
• It focuses on how order is maintained in the society.
Comte iden5fies language, religion, and division of labor as crucial elements for social stability. According to
him:
• Language: Essen5al for communica5on and community bonding. It facilitates the transfer of
knowledge and skills across genera5ons, fostering solidarity and social order.
• Religion: Acts as a posi5ve guide, compensa5ng for language limita5ons by uni5ng society through
common beliefs. It provides moral guidance, preven5ng societal disintegra5on and serving as the
founda5on of social order.
• Division of Labor: Creates interdependence by binding society through classes. While essen5al for
state coopera5on, there is a risk of individuals priori5zing personal interests, poten5ally leading to a
weakened connec5on with the broader community.
2. Social Dynamics
• It deals with phenomena of change in society.
• It keeps on changing.
• Comte placed greater emphasis on the study of social dynamics, or social change.
• His theory of social dynamics is founded on the law of the three stages.
• It begins with the study of the process of social changes. Therefore, it is concerned with the maXer
of social progress.
• According to Comte, social dynamics describe the successive and necessary stages in the
development in the human mind and the society.
E.g. Evolu5on of Laws, Technological Advancements, Educa5onal reforms, Globalisa5on and
Interna5onal laws. Etc
2) Herbert Spencer 1820-1903:
1. Organic Analogy
2. Concept of Func8onalism Simple
3. Social Darwinism (Theory of Evolu8on) Compounded
4. Lassiez Faire Doubly Compounded
5. No interven8on Tribley Compounded
6. Simple to Complex
(Militant) (industrialist)
• Spencer was Ini5ally Educated by parents, later he became engineer in Bri5sh railway.
• But he was inclined towards wri5ng and he wrote his first book that was Social sta7c (which was
appreciated by radicals).
• Hit second book was principles of psychology (unappreciated).
• Other Books: >Principles of Biology
> Principles of Sociology
> Study of Sociology
> Synthe5c Philosophy
Organic Analogy:
• Human beings compared with society. In the society there are different ins5tu5ons, all these
ins5tu5ons have different func5ons comparison between these ins5tu5ons.
• Concept of Interdependent: Dependent on each other.
• Example: educa5on is independent, na5ons growth is
dependent on good educa5on. Spencer and particularly
Durkheim’s ideas grew in
• Spencer maintains that we can understand society best, if we popularity during the 1950s and
compare it with an organism. He thinks that society is like a 1960s, partly due to the
resurgence in conservative values
biological system, a greater organism, alike in its structure
in the USA and were developed
and its func5ons. Like an organism society is subject to the by an American called Talcott
same process of gradual growth or development from a Parsons (1902-7979).
simple to complex state. Like any organism, society also
exhibits “differen2a2on in func2ons and integra2on
structure.”
• In this connec5on, it must be noted that Spencer does not subscribe to the view that society is an
organism; he maintains it only as an analogy.
• As humans started at simple sense and later become complex humans, similarly society started with
simple humans and slowly became compounded (clan) and at last tribly compounded (tribe)
• Each component of society has a par5cular role, example Sa5 system and its abolishment,
• Gives emphasis on order and stability, coexistence
• Everything in society has a purpose
• These are not in conflict; they are interconnected and interdependent.
Func7onalism was 'founded' by French sociologist, Émile Durkheim. Further key theorists of this
sociological perspec5ve were Talco[ Parsons and Robert Merton. They established func5onalist arguments
in several areas of sociological research, including educa5on, family forma5on and social inequality.
In func5onalist theory, the different parts of society are primarily composed of social ins5tu5ons, each
designed to fill different needs. Family, government, economy, media, educa5on, and religion are important
to understanding this theory and the core ins5tu5ons that define sociology. According to func5onalism, an
ins5tu5on only exists because it serves a vital role in the func5oning of society. If it no longer serves a role,
an ins5tu5on will die away. When new needs evolve or emerge, new ins5tu5ons will be created to meet
them.
Social Darwinism:
CriOcism:
• Spencer’s support of a “laissez-faire” philosophy was also ques5oned at the beginning of the 20th
century, when war, infla5on, unemployment, etc., were causing chaos in Europe and the United
States. As a result, more and more people thought that society and poli5cs needed to be controlled
by ra5onale.
• Herbert Spencer’s idea that society is a super-organic system was flawed in many ways. He couldn’t
see how culture fit into the world as a whole. His explana5on of how socie5es change from simple
to complex was also incorrect.
• Timasheff says that because his law of evolution is a cosmic law, his theory is strictly philosophical
and not sociological.
• Critics said he made what is now called the “naturalistic fallacy,” which is the mistake of trying to
find morality and ethics in nature.
• According to some social thinkers Herbert Spencer’s theory lacks practicability. It is not
practical and realistic. Even today there are several tribes and aboriginals that do not show
any sign of evolution.
• It also lacks uniformity. It is not possible to have a uniform pattern of social evolution in all
societies. Because the factors and circumstances responsible for evolution differ from one
another.
• Mere survival for existence is not enough for man. In human society qualities like
sympathy, sacrifice, kindness, love etc. are also present. These are quite different from
struggle for existence.
In spite of the above criticisms made by some of the social thinkers, Spencer’s theory of social
evolution is a master key to the riddles of the universe.
hXps://www.yourar5clelibrary.com/sociology/herbert-spencers-theory-of-social-evolu5on-explained-with-
diagram/43739#:~:text=of%20evolu5onary%20levels.-
,1.,lacking%20in%20stable%20rela5onship%20structure.
Emile Durkheim: (1858-1917)
Books:
The Division of Labor in Society (1893), The Rules of Sociological Method (1895), Suicide (1897) and The
Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912).
• There is some kind of commonality, you iden5fy as those commonali5es. The Society wants to
maintain those collec5ve commonali5es. SeXle disputes as a collec5ve unit.
• Even if you don’t want to do it some5me but you have to do it, for social acceptance, not to get
excommunicated, as society cannot work as a disrup5ve unit.
• Example, reduc5on of age bar in juvenile offenders.
• Durkheim defines collec5ve consciousness as the reason why and how individuals who are different
can come together and form a society. This is because collec5ve consciousness refers to a set of
common beliefs, values, and behaviours that are found within a society.
Social Fact:
• Social customs are taken as it is, you don’t get to choose. Group Coerciveness.
• It is imposed on individual, example: black dress for lawyers
• It has been there so we have to accept it, beyond the individual choice and it is external and
coercive.
• Example: Russia Ukraine War, Israel Pales5ne War, if there was a collec5ve consciousness it will be
resolved,
• Posi7ve example: G20, made for interest of everyone.
• Collec5ve consciousness it’s strong because of the ins5tu5on and not the individual.
• Durkheim defined social facts as things external to, and coercive of, the actor. These are created
from collec5ve forces and do not emanate from the individual.
• Taking things at Substance
Sui Generis:
• Society as a thing in itself, something of its own kind, or a thing apart. Durkheim’s view was that
society has an existence of its own, apart from the individuals in it, and is thus a proper object of
study.
• Things that have been on its own, the Origin of these Prac5ces/Customs can’t be tracked.
Theory of Suicide:
• Suicide is a social problem, caused of social facts and not Individuals. According to Durkheim,
suicide is not an individual act nor a personal ac5on.
• Suicide as primarily a social phenomenon in terms of the breakdown of the vital bond of life.
Types of Suicide:
Emile Durkheim classified different types of suicides on the basis of different types of rela5onship between
the actor and his society.
(1) Egois7c suicide:
• According to Durkheim, when a man becomes socially isolated or feels that he has no place in
the society he destroys himself. This is the suicide of self-centred person who lacks altruis5c
feelings and is usually cut off from main stream of the society.
• Lack of Social Integra5on, need to learn to face the failure, man is isolated, need social support
to cope.
• This type of suicide occurs when individuals and the group are too close and in5mate. This
kind of suicide results from the over integra5on of the individual into social proof, for
example - Sa5 customs.
• Doing it for others, Strong Social integra5on, Strongly Socially regulated, you enjoy your
death, thinking you are doing it for a good cause. You will be rewarded, (glorified by society
for the larger cause)
• E.g. Soldiers
• This type of suicide is due to certain breakdown of social equilibrium, such as, suicide a`er
bankruptcy or a`er winning a loXery. In other words, anomic suicide takes place in a
situa5on which has cropped up suddenly.
• Normlessness, you don’t know that to do, there is no control, there is no purpose of living,
Weak Social Regula5on leads to mayhem, chaos, and bloodbath.
• E.g.: Kibbutz system: it's a community where people voluntarily live and work together on a
noncompe55ve basis. Sense of community: Kibbutzim are known for their strong sense of
community, with residents sharing resources and working together to achieve common
goals, taking care of children and old people in a common hall.
• This type of suicide is due to overregula5on in society. Under the overregula5on of a society,
when a servant or slave commits suicide, when a barren woman commits suicide, it is the
example of fatalis5c suicide.
• These individuals are placed under extreme rules or high expecta5ons are set upon them,
which removes a person’s sense of self or individuality.
• Strong Social Regula5on, individual choice,
• E.g. Thallai Koothal: the tradi5onal prac5ce of senicide (killing of the elderly) or involuntary
euthanasia, by their own family members, Also, Leaving Elderly people in Mathura and
Vrindavan.
• Social facts should not be reified and treated as social objects, but rather defined as arrangements
of practices . Additionally, Durkheim's interpretation of social facts as things has been criticized for
neglecting the power of ideas and norms, and being materialistic and deterministic .
• Durkheim doesn’t state which level of crime is the right amount, Just because crime has a function
in society does not necessarily mean that society is deliberately creating crime in order for the
functions of it to be prevalent. It doesn’t focus on how crime affects individuals or groups in society.
It also doesn’t recognise that crime can weaken solidarity and increase isolation – most women stay
in at night due to the fear of rape.
• Durkheim fails to adequately address the ecological fallacy of studying suicide rates to understand
individual behaviour.
• Durkheim's understanding of religion as a necessarily social phenomenon. Religion originates in
society where the "collective effervescence “of ritual gives religious practices and beliefs extra-
human power. Durkheim relies on accounts of "primitive cultures" for his theory and argues that
the totem of the society reflects the society as a whole and thus becomes bigger than any one
person and the society itself. The power of the sacred totem comes from the society. Critics would
argue that religion does not necessarily have to be social. For example, ascetic traditions that
prioritize isolation and solitude would not fit Durkheim's theory.
• For Durkheim all of life is divided between the sacred and the profane and society maintains the
boundaries between the two. But in many ways the sacred and the profane are not so easily
bounded. They ooze into one another in daily life.
• Ideal (Highest form), It is a par5cular benchmark which you create for the society,
• To aspire to achieve the ideal type, Society creates an Ought to Be, Like. Caste-free society,
discrimina5on free society. Etc.
• A yard s5ck measurement.
• Defini5on: An Ideal type is an analy5cal construct that serves inves5gator as a measuring rod/scale
to ascertain similari5es as well as devia5ons in concrete cases. Example, seLng up target is an ideal
type and measuring how close you’re to achieve it. Like laws of aXrac5on.
• Ideal type can be at individual as well as higher level, its about keeping a target and working
towards the target to achieve it.
• It is a kind of abstract model which is created by Max Weber and it is useful in the standard
comparison which enables the person to look at the original aspect of the real world more clearly
and in a more systema5c way. It is a constructed ideal used to approximate reality by selec5ng and
accentua5ng certain elements. This is commonly arranged or constructed as a one-sided point of
view.
Three types of Ideal type:
1. Ideal type of Historical Reali5es: The historical ideal type is related to the reali0es that have been seen or
found in history. The modern capitalist market is one example of a historical ideal type.
2. Ideal type which refers to abstract elements of the historical reality: that are observable in a variety of
historical and cultural contexts such as ‘bureaucracy’ or ‘feudalism’
3. Ideal types ‘that cons5tute ra5onalizing reconstruc5ons of a par5cular kind of behaviour. This includes
changing and moulding behaviour for acceptance. Eg: Moot court. Focuses on how individuals would behave
under certain ideal condi0ons.
According to Durkheim, things need to be taken as it is and there is no clarity and no individual interpreta0on. Lacks
Subjec0vity. [Macro Sociology]
According to Weber: Every ac0vity carried out by an individual have different meanings, he focuses on subjec0vity
and is concerned with individuals understanding. [Micro Sociology]
• Every ac0vity has different meaning as for the individual. Eg: Blind men and elephant in the room
• Here different meanings are associated with the same act as per the individual’s understanding.
• Different ac0vity by individual as per the individual’s interpreta0on of the situa0on.
• There is a need to understand the en0re picture.
Eg: Playing for one hour straight and geOng really thirsty, drinking water aggressively, when someone else looks
they will judge them without knowing that the other person is really thirsty. This shows different individual
interpreta0ons of the same situa0on.
“Sociology… is a science which attempts the interpretive understanding of social action in order thereby
to arrive at a causal explanation of its course and effects.”
• This means the comprehending or understanding in social sciences. We can understand the ac0on and
comprehend the subjec0ve inten0on of the actors.
• Sociology seeks to understand social structures by dissec0ng social processes into meaningful individual
ac0ons.
Max Weber's sociology theory focuses on how certain ac0ons and behaviors "make sense" to agents in society. He
used the German term verstehen, which translates to "understanding," in order to characterize his approach to
studying social rela0ons and ac0ons.
2 Ways:
Link this With concept of ideal type, Example: Not teaching in class and gossiping by the teacher, this can have two
interpreta0ons:
a. In the short term it will have mul0ple meaning like not in the mood to teach or 0red.
b. In the long run one par0cular note is that something is wrong.
• Value neutrality is the ethical duty and prac0ce of maintaining impar0ality and remaining unbiased and
judgment-free during the interpreta0on and publishing of research findings.
• It is difficult for human beings not a machine we are, it is influenced by behavior and also influenced by our
own surroundings. As humans we carry bias.
• Eg: giving Judgement, (uncle judge) Par0es are known to the judge,
• Human should perform act as a judge, what you expect a judge to do, keep the emo0ons and influence aside
and decide on the merits.
• Ethically, sociologists should report whatever they find, even if it goes against their personal values and even
if they don’t agree with or like the findings.
• A person can be a good advocate for himself and the best judge for others, before judging don’t be biased
and know the complete background. One need to learn unlearn and relearn to change biased aOtude.
• Eg: India – China Conflict: both party biased, no scope for Dialouge.
• Eg; Jus0ce Khanna: Dissen0ng opinion on Indira Gandhi (during emergency)
Example; In China you cannot speak against the government, example of A0k Ahmad.
Types of Authority:
Legitimized by long-standing Based on a leader’s personal Authority resides in the office, not
Source of
custom, remains in hand of qualities, the persona that he the person, Modern legitimate
Power
royal families. possesses. authority
• Well-defined hierarchy within the organization: You know your jurisdiction, can’t encroach on others, you’re only
responsible for the work allotted to you and your powers are limited to it. Follow the chain of command
Cri7que
• Weber’s applica5on of Verstehen in his study of Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism was
similar to Durkheim’s social determinism. Anthony Giddens and Kalberg clarified this by saying that
Weber wanted to include both macro and micro level studies under this method.
• Parsons cri5cised ideal types by saying that while the idea was valid, the implementa5on was
lacking. Parsons said that Weber’s ideal type would cause forma5on of mul5ple ideal types of the
same object without lending a complete understanding i.e. it would lead to type atomism. Parsons
suggested that ideal types must emerge from a single general theory.
• Many sociologists have commented on the u7lity of value guided research in gaining new insights.
Value neutrality makes the sociologist a mere observer and thus unable to guide the social process
in any meaningful way. Ex. Alvin Gouldner and reflexive sociology as moral sociology.