SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 37
SOC4044 Sociological
 Theory:



 Max Weber
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               1
Max Weber
   1864-1920
   Pronounced
   “vey-bear”
   German
   Protestant
   Mother was a
   strong Calvinist
   Father was a
   German bourgeoisie
   politician
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               2
Max Weber

   Paradigm: Pluralist
   Class of Theories: Divergent Interests
        Sociology is properly concerned with
        individuals, not just structure
(Perdue 1986:173)
Perdue, William D. 1986. Sociological Theory: Explanation, Paradigm, and Ideology .
   Palto Alto, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company.




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               3
Max Weber:
Social Action

  Max Weber conceived of sociology as a
  comprehensive science of social action.
                                       action
  In his analytical focus on individual human
       actors he differed from many of his
      predecessors whose sociology was
      conceived in social-structural terms.
   Spencer concentrated on the evolution of
     the body social as analogous to an
                    organism.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               4
Max Weber:
Social Action

     Durkheim’s central concern was with
    institutional arrangements that maintain
   the cohesion of social structures. Marx’s
      vision of society was informed by his
    preoccupation with the conflicts between
     social classes within changing social
       structures and productive relations.


Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               5
Max Weber:
Social Action

  In contrast, Weber’s primary focus was on the
 subjective meanings that human actors attach to
   their actions in their mutual orientations within
     specific social-historical contexts. Behavior
    devoid of such meaning, Weber argued, falls
          outside the purview of sociology.
Coser (1971:217)
Coser, Lewis A. 1971. Masters of Sociological Thought: Ideas in
  Historical and Social Context. New York: Harcourt Brace
  Jovanovich.

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               6
Max Weber:
Social Action

           Review Handout

     Weber’s Model of Social
             System



Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               7
Max Weber:
Social Action

  Four Major Types of Social Action
  Purposeful or Goal-oriented
  Rational Action
     Both goal and means are rationally chosen
        Example: An engineer who builds a bridge by the
        most efficient technique of relating means to ends




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               8
Max Weber:
Social Action

  Value-oriented Rational Action
     Striving for a substantive goal, which in itself
     may not be rational but which is nonetheless
     pursued
        Example: Attainment of salvation




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               9
Max Weber:
Social Action

  Emotional or Affective Motivation
  Action
     Anchored in the emotional state of the actor
     rather than in the rational weighing of means
     and ends
        Example: Participants in the religious services of a
        fundamentalist sect




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               10
Max Weber:
Social Action

  Traditional Action
     Guided by customary habits of thought, by
     reliance on “the eternal yesterday”
        Example: The behavior of members of an
        Orthodox Jewish congregation




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               11
Max Weber:
Social Action

   Weber was primarily concerned with modern
        Western society, in which, as he saw it,
          behavior had come to be dominated
        increasingly by goal-oriented rationality,
       whereas in earlier periods it tended to be
    motivated by tradition, affect, or value-oriented
   rationality. His studies of non-Western societies
        were primarily designed to highlight this
            distinctive Western development.

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               12
Max Weber:
Social Action

       Karl Mannheim stated:
 Max Weber’s whole work is in the
  last analysis directed toward the
   question “Which social factors
       have brought about the
      rationalization of Western
             civilization?”
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               13
Max Weber:
Ideal Types
                          Ideal Types
      An ideal type is an analytical construct that serves the
      investigator as a measuring rod to ascertain similarities
      as well as deviations in concrete cases. It provide the
      basic method for comparative study.
         An ideal type is not meant to be a moral ideal. There
         can be an ideal type of a brothel or a chapel.
         It is not a statistical average
            Average Protestants in a given region or at a give time may
            be quite different from ideal typical Protestants
         Used to develop hypotheses
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               14
Max Weber:
Ideal Types

  Three levels of Ideal Types
     First are the ideal types rooted in historical
     particularities, such as the “western city,” “the
     Protestant Ethic,” or “modern capitalism,”
     which refer to phenomena that appear only in
     specific historical periods and in particular
     cultural areas.



Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               15
Max Weber:
Ideal Types
     A second kind involves abstract elements of social
     reality--such concepts as “bureaucracy” or
     “feudalism”--that may be found in a variety of
     historical and cultural contexts.
     Finally, there is a third kind of ideal
     type. . .”rationalizing reconstructions of a particular
     kind of behavior. According to Weber, all propositions
     in economic theory, for example, fall into this
     category. They all refer to ways in which man would
     behave were they actuated by purely economic
     motives, were they purely economic men.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               16
Max Weber:
Authority

               Authority
  Three main modes of authority (claiming
  legitimacy)
     Rational-legal authority
        Authority may be based on rational grounds and
        anchored in impersonal rules that have been
        legally enacted or contractually established.



Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               17
Max Weber:
Authority

     Traditional authority
        Based on the belief in the sanctity of tradition, of
        “the eternal yesterday.” It is not codified in
        impersonal rules, but inheres in particular persons
        who may either inherit it or be invested with it by a
        higher authority
     Charismatic authority
        Rests on the appeal of leaders who claim
        allegiance because of their extraordinary
        virtuosity, whether ethical, heroic, or religious.

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               18
Max Weber:
Authority

     This typology of various forms of authority
     relations is important on several counts. Its
    sociological contribution rests more especially
      on the fact that Weber, in contrast to many
   political theorists, conceives of authority in all its
    manifestations as characteristic of the relation
    between leaders and followers, rather than as
             an attribute of the leader alone.


Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               19
Max Weber:
Bureaucracy

                      Bureaucracy
  Formal organization of the officialdom of large-scale
  enterprise (e.g., government, military, economic,
  religious, educational), the ideal-type of such as
  organization characterized by:
     Clearly defined division of labor
     Rationality (i.e., a business-like attention to implementing goals
     of the organization)
     Impersonal application of rules
     Routinization of tasks to the degree that personnel are easily
     replaceable

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               20
Max Weber:
Bureaucracy

     This bureaucratic coordination of the
     actions of large numbers of people has
   become the dominant structural feature of
       modern forms of organization. Only
     through this organizational device has
   large-scale planning, both for the modern
    state and the modern economy, become
                     possible.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               21
Max Weber:
Bureaucracy

     Yet Weber also noted the
   dysfunctions of bureaucracy. Its
   major advantage, the calculability
        of results, also causes
   depersonalization. It is difficult to
      deal with individual cases.

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               22
Max Weber:
Study of Religion
   Major works
       The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (Two Parts:
       1904 and 1905)
       The Religion of China (1913)
       The Religion of India (1916-1917)
       Ancient Judaism (1917)
   These major works were based on the question: Why
   did modern capitalism initially occur in the West and not
   in other parts of the world? (Turner, Beeghley, and Powers
   1998:162-163)
Turner, Jonathan H., Leonard Beeghley, and Charles H. Powers. 1998. The Emergence
   of Sociological Theory. 4th ed. Cincinnati, OH: Wadsworth Publishing Company.

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               23
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

           Review Handout

Weber’s Causal Argument for
     the Emergence of
         Capitalism

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               24
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

 The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit
      of Capitalism is part of an
   exercise in historical hypothesis
       testing in which Weber
  constructed a logical experiment
   using ideal types as conceptual
                 tools.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               25
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

       Theology has an
      enormous impact on
        behavior---even
     economical and social
           behavior.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               26
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

Occupational statistics in those nations of
 mixed religious composition seemed to
 show that those in higher socioeconomic
 positions were overwhelmingly Protestant.
Weber was not attempting to prove a
 relationship between Protestantism and
 economic success (that was a given), but
 rather to explain the relationship.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               27
Max Weber:
Study of Religion
  Weber developed a historical ideal type
  called Spirit of Capitalism. This ideal type
  has four components:
     Work is valued as an end in itself
     Trade and profit are indicators of personal
     virtue
     A methodically organized life governed by
     reason indicates a righteous state of being
     Delayed gratification is a virtue
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               28
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

  Weber focused on the Calvinist’s form or
  Protestantism
  Calvinist’s theology/doctrine had four
  consequences on the Spirit of Capitalism:
     Predestination
     Lack of certainty of salvation created inner
     loneliness and isolation


Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               29
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

     People looked for signs of being among the
     elect
        Absolute duty to consider themselves chosen
        Intense worldly activity creates self-confidence
     All believers were expected to lead
     methodical and ascetic lives unencumbered
     by irrational emotions, superstitions, or
     desires of the flesh


Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               30
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

  Why did John Wesley call his group
  “Methodists?”
  Why do many evangelical and
  fundamentalist groups have “standards”
  and/or rules that appear rather “strict?”
     No dancing
     Avoid theaters, movies, dramas
     No card playing, use of dice of any kind
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               31
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

 Among the Calvinist and many of the other
        Protestant groups-----wealth was
      “automatically” accumulated through
   intense “economic activity” but was not to
    be “shown.” The accumulation was to be
         converted into “sound” assets.
  The Amish are a perfect illustration of the
  Spirit of Capitalism as studied by Weber.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               32
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

Even though the strict nature
  of early Protestant groups
    are all but gone----the
   residues are evident in
       today’s society.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               33
Max Weber:
Study of Religion

           Review Handout

 Weber’s Quasi-Experimental
   Design in the Study of
          Religion

Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               34
Max Weber:
Class and Status

            Class and Status
Method for studying stratification of
 populations for sociological purposes.
 Class
     “…property…and lack of property…” is the
     basis of all class situations
     Class is a type of socioeconomic category
     Rational behavior
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               35
Max Weber:
Class and Status

  Status
     Evaluations people make of one another
     Rank order of desired behavior and traits
     Value-oriented behavior




Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               36
Max Weber:
Class and Status
                       Examples
If we use the class groups of low, blue collar, lower middle
   class, middle class, upper middle class, wealthy and the
   statuses of low, middle, high---what are the class and
   status levels of the following:
  College Presidents
  Teachers
  Medical Doctors
  Investment Bankers
  Pastors
Sunday, October 21, 2012
                     © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender
                                               37

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Mais procurados (20)

Max Weber
Max WeberMax Weber
Max Weber
 
Dialectical materialism by Man Bahadur Shahi
Dialectical materialism by Man Bahadur ShahiDialectical materialism by Man Bahadur Shahi
Dialectical materialism by Man Bahadur Shahi
 
Max Weber Verstehen ( Intepretative Understanding)
Max Weber Verstehen ( Intepretative Understanding)Max Weber Verstehen ( Intepretative Understanding)
Max Weber Verstehen ( Intepretative Understanding)
 
Classical Sociological Theory
Classical Sociological TheoryClassical Sociological Theory
Classical Sociological Theory
 
Karl Marx and theory
Karl Marx and theoryKarl Marx and theory
Karl Marx and theory
 
Karl marx
Karl marxKarl marx
Karl marx
 
Emile Durkheim, Sociologist ppt
Emile Durkheim, Sociologist pptEmile Durkheim, Sociologist ppt
Emile Durkheim, Sociologist ppt
 
Class struggle By Karl Marx ppt
Class struggle By Karl Marx ppt Class struggle By Karl Marx ppt
Class struggle By Karl Marx ppt
 
Social Action
Social ActionSocial Action
Social Action
 
karl marx historial materialism, alienation, mode of production, class struggles
karl marx historial materialism, alienation, mode of production, class struggleskarl marx historial materialism, alienation, mode of production, class struggles
karl marx historial materialism, alienation, mode of production, class struggles
 
Herbert Spencer's Theory of Social Evolution & Organic Analogy
Herbert Spencer's Theory of Social Evolution & Organic AnalogyHerbert Spencer's Theory of Social Evolution & Organic Analogy
Herbert Spencer's Theory of Social Evolution & Organic Analogy
 
Karl Marx
Karl MarxKarl Marx
Karl Marx
 
August comte
August comteAugust comte
August comte
 
Emile durkheim
Emile durkheimEmile durkheim
Emile durkheim
 
Herbert spencer
Herbert spencerHerbert spencer
Herbert spencer
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comte
 
Emile durkheim sociology
Emile durkheim   sociologyEmile durkheim   sociology
Emile durkheim sociology
 
Ralf dahrendorf
Ralf dahrendorfRalf dahrendorf
Ralf dahrendorf
 
Karl Marx and conflict theory
Karl Marx and conflict theoryKarl Marx and conflict theory
Karl Marx and conflict theory
 
Socialism
SocialismSocialism
Socialism
 

Destaque

Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticism
Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticismMax weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticism
Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticismJulpahan
 
Religious affiliations and social stratification
Religious affiliations and social stratificationReligious affiliations and social stratification
Religious affiliations and social stratificationshaify16
 
Max weber sociología de la religión
Max weber   sociología de la religiónMax weber   sociología de la religión
Max weber sociología de la religiónMarco Santillan
 
Theories of social stratification marx weber
Theories of social stratification marx weberTheories of social stratification marx weber
Theories of social stratification marx weberjdubrow2000
 
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining power
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining powerSCLY3 – power and politics: defining power
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining powerCharlotte Rout
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comteusafzai80
 
Max weber bureaucracy
Max weber bureaucracyMax weber bureaucracy
Max weber bureaucracyanjalibedi512
 
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)Diamond94
 

Destaque (11)

Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticism
Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticismMax weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticism
Max weber’s theory of bureaucracy and its criticism
 
Religious affiliations and social stratification
Religious affiliations and social stratificationReligious affiliations and social stratification
Religious affiliations and social stratification
 
Max weber sociología de la religión
Max weber   sociología de la religiónMax weber   sociología de la religión
Max weber sociología de la religión
 
Theories of social stratification marx weber
Theories of social stratification marx weberTheories of social stratification marx weber
Theories of social stratification marx weber
 
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining power
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining powerSCLY3 – power and politics: defining power
SCLY3 – power and politics: defining power
 
Durkheim and
Durkheim andDurkheim and
Durkheim and
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comte
 
Max weber bureaucracy
Max weber bureaucracyMax weber bureaucracy
Max weber bureaucracy
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comte
 
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)
Classical Sociological Theorist (auguste comte)
 
Karl Marx
Karl MarxKarl Marx
Karl Marx
 

Semelhante a Max Weber's Sociological Theory and Concepts of Social Action, Authority, and Bureaucracy

Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptx
Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptxShifting Paradygm in PH.pptx
Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptxSantoshi Paudel
 
Emile durkheim
Emile durkheimEmile durkheim
Emile durkheimPam Green
 
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011Sajib
 
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedom
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedomPi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedom
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedomMichael LaPlante
 
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weber
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weberสัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weber
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weberSani Satjachaliao
 
Charles wright mills
Charles wright millsCharles wright mills
Charles wright millsPam Green
 
Social Problems Theories.ppt
Social Problems Theories.pptSocial Problems Theories.ppt
Social Problems Theories.pptChrisGabriel21
 
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...Fernanda Vasconcelos Dias
 
MAC201 Encoding decoding lecture
MAC201 Encoding decoding lectureMAC201 Encoding decoding lecture
MAC201 Encoding decoding lectureRob Jewitt
 
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2Founding fathers of sociology; part 2
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2USIC
 
Sociology of Max Weber
Sociology of Max WeberSociology of Max Weber
Sociology of Max WeberSheikh Ahmed
 
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?Linda Vermette
 
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docx
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docxChapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docx
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docxwalterl4
 

Semelhante a Max Weber's Sociological Theory and Concepts of Social Action, Authority, and Bureaucracy (20)

Max weber
Max weberMax weber
Max weber
 
MaxWeber.pptx
MaxWeber.pptxMaxWeber.pptx
MaxWeber.pptx
 
Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptx
Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptxShifting Paradygm in PH.pptx
Shifting Paradygm in PH.pptx
 
Emile durkheim
Emile durkheimEmile durkheim
Emile durkheim
 
Sociological theories
Sociological theoriesSociological theories
Sociological theories
 
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011
Social science lecture 1(part-2) ppt summer 2011
 
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedom
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedomPi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedom
Pi 2012 12-18-presidents-essay the march of freedom
 
SociologyExchange.co.uk Shared Resource
SociologyExchange.co.uk Shared ResourceSociologyExchange.co.uk Shared Resource
SociologyExchange.co.uk Shared Resource
 
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weber
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weberสัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weber
สัปดาห์ที่ 12 max weber
 
Charles wright mills
Charles wright millsCharles wright mills
Charles wright mills
 
Social Problems Theories.ppt
Social Problems Theories.pptSocial Problems Theories.ppt
Social Problems Theories.ppt
 
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...
Mini-research: Pierre BOURDIEU’S THEORIES in relation to organizational behav...
 
MAC201 Encoding decoding lecture
MAC201 Encoding decoding lectureMAC201 Encoding decoding lecture
MAC201 Encoding decoding lecture
 
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2Founding fathers of sociology; part 2
Founding fathers of sociology; part 2
 
Weber's Perspective
Weber's Perspective Weber's Perspective
Weber's Perspective
 
Sociology of Max Weber
Sociology of Max WeberSociology of Max Weber
Sociology of Max Weber
 
Sociology of weber
Sociology of weberSociology of weber
Sociology of weber
 
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?
Vermette - PP - Chapter 1 - What is sociology?
 
public admin.ppt
public admin.pptpublic admin.ppt
public admin.ppt
 
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docx
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docxChapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docx
Chapter 2 Culture1. Define Culture and each component of c.docx
 

Mais de Pam Green

Population Policies
Population PoliciesPopulation Policies
Population PoliciesPam Green
 
Ferdinand Toenmies
Ferdinand ToenmiesFerdinand Toenmies
Ferdinand ToenmiesPam Green
 
Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim Pam Green
 
Charles horton cooley
Charles horton cooleyCharles horton cooley
Charles horton cooleyPam Green
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comtePam Green
 
201.04 sociological research methods
201.04 sociological research methods201.04 sociological research methods
201.04 sociological research methodsPam Green
 

Mais de Pam Green (7)

Population Policies
Population PoliciesPopulation Policies
Population Policies
 
Ferdinand Toenmies
Ferdinand ToenmiesFerdinand Toenmies
Ferdinand Toenmies
 
Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim
 
Sociology
SociologySociology
Sociology
 
Charles horton cooley
Charles horton cooleyCharles horton cooley
Charles horton cooley
 
Auguste comte
Auguste comteAuguste comte
Auguste comte
 
201.04 sociological research methods
201.04 sociological research methods201.04 sociological research methods
201.04 sociological research methods
 

Max Weber's Sociological Theory and Concepts of Social Action, Authority, and Bureaucracy

  • 1. SOC4044 Sociological Theory: Max Weber Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 1
  • 2. Max Weber 1864-1920 Pronounced “vey-bear” German Protestant Mother was a strong Calvinist Father was a German bourgeoisie politician Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 2
  • 3. Max Weber Paradigm: Pluralist Class of Theories: Divergent Interests Sociology is properly concerned with individuals, not just structure (Perdue 1986:173) Perdue, William D. 1986. Sociological Theory: Explanation, Paradigm, and Ideology . Palto Alto, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 3
  • 4. Max Weber: Social Action Max Weber conceived of sociology as a comprehensive science of social action. action In his analytical focus on individual human actors he differed from many of his predecessors whose sociology was conceived in social-structural terms. Spencer concentrated on the evolution of the body social as analogous to an organism. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 4
  • 5. Max Weber: Social Action Durkheim’s central concern was with institutional arrangements that maintain the cohesion of social structures. Marx’s vision of society was informed by his preoccupation with the conflicts between social classes within changing social structures and productive relations. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 5
  • 6. Max Weber: Social Action In contrast, Weber’s primary focus was on the subjective meanings that human actors attach to their actions in their mutual orientations within specific social-historical contexts. Behavior devoid of such meaning, Weber argued, falls outside the purview of sociology. Coser (1971:217) Coser, Lewis A. 1971. Masters of Sociological Thought: Ideas in Historical and Social Context. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 6
  • 7. Max Weber: Social Action Review Handout Weber’s Model of Social System Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 7
  • 8. Max Weber: Social Action Four Major Types of Social Action Purposeful or Goal-oriented Rational Action Both goal and means are rationally chosen Example: An engineer who builds a bridge by the most efficient technique of relating means to ends Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 8
  • 9. Max Weber: Social Action Value-oriented Rational Action Striving for a substantive goal, which in itself may not be rational but which is nonetheless pursued Example: Attainment of salvation Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 9
  • 10. Max Weber: Social Action Emotional or Affective Motivation Action Anchored in the emotional state of the actor rather than in the rational weighing of means and ends Example: Participants in the religious services of a fundamentalist sect Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 10
  • 11. Max Weber: Social Action Traditional Action Guided by customary habits of thought, by reliance on “the eternal yesterday” Example: The behavior of members of an Orthodox Jewish congregation Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 11
  • 12. Max Weber: Social Action Weber was primarily concerned with modern Western society, in which, as he saw it, behavior had come to be dominated increasingly by goal-oriented rationality, whereas in earlier periods it tended to be motivated by tradition, affect, or value-oriented rationality. His studies of non-Western societies were primarily designed to highlight this distinctive Western development. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 12
  • 13. Max Weber: Social Action Karl Mannheim stated: Max Weber’s whole work is in the last analysis directed toward the question “Which social factors have brought about the rationalization of Western civilization?” Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 13
  • 14. Max Weber: Ideal Types Ideal Types An ideal type is an analytical construct that serves the investigator as a measuring rod to ascertain similarities as well as deviations in concrete cases. It provide the basic method for comparative study. An ideal type is not meant to be a moral ideal. There can be an ideal type of a brothel or a chapel. It is not a statistical average Average Protestants in a given region or at a give time may be quite different from ideal typical Protestants Used to develop hypotheses Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 14
  • 15. Max Weber: Ideal Types Three levels of Ideal Types First are the ideal types rooted in historical particularities, such as the “western city,” “the Protestant Ethic,” or “modern capitalism,” which refer to phenomena that appear only in specific historical periods and in particular cultural areas. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 15
  • 16. Max Weber: Ideal Types A second kind involves abstract elements of social reality--such concepts as “bureaucracy” or “feudalism”--that may be found in a variety of historical and cultural contexts. Finally, there is a third kind of ideal type. . .”rationalizing reconstructions of a particular kind of behavior. According to Weber, all propositions in economic theory, for example, fall into this category. They all refer to ways in which man would behave were they actuated by purely economic motives, were they purely economic men. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 16
  • 17. Max Weber: Authority Authority Three main modes of authority (claiming legitimacy) Rational-legal authority Authority may be based on rational grounds and anchored in impersonal rules that have been legally enacted or contractually established. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 17
  • 18. Max Weber: Authority Traditional authority Based on the belief in the sanctity of tradition, of “the eternal yesterday.” It is not codified in impersonal rules, but inheres in particular persons who may either inherit it or be invested with it by a higher authority Charismatic authority Rests on the appeal of leaders who claim allegiance because of their extraordinary virtuosity, whether ethical, heroic, or religious. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 18
  • 19. Max Weber: Authority This typology of various forms of authority relations is important on several counts. Its sociological contribution rests more especially on the fact that Weber, in contrast to many political theorists, conceives of authority in all its manifestations as characteristic of the relation between leaders and followers, rather than as an attribute of the leader alone. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 19
  • 20. Max Weber: Bureaucracy Bureaucracy Formal organization of the officialdom of large-scale enterprise (e.g., government, military, economic, religious, educational), the ideal-type of such as organization characterized by: Clearly defined division of labor Rationality (i.e., a business-like attention to implementing goals of the organization) Impersonal application of rules Routinization of tasks to the degree that personnel are easily replaceable Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 20
  • 21. Max Weber: Bureaucracy This bureaucratic coordination of the actions of large numbers of people has become the dominant structural feature of modern forms of organization. Only through this organizational device has large-scale planning, both for the modern state and the modern economy, become possible. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 21
  • 22. Max Weber: Bureaucracy Yet Weber also noted the dysfunctions of bureaucracy. Its major advantage, the calculability of results, also causes depersonalization. It is difficult to deal with individual cases. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 22
  • 23. Max Weber: Study of Religion Major works The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (Two Parts: 1904 and 1905) The Religion of China (1913) The Religion of India (1916-1917) Ancient Judaism (1917) These major works were based on the question: Why did modern capitalism initially occur in the West and not in other parts of the world? (Turner, Beeghley, and Powers 1998:162-163) Turner, Jonathan H., Leonard Beeghley, and Charles H. Powers. 1998. The Emergence of Sociological Theory. 4th ed. Cincinnati, OH: Wadsworth Publishing Company. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 23
  • 24. Max Weber: Study of Religion Review Handout Weber’s Causal Argument for the Emergence of Capitalism Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 24
  • 25. Max Weber: Study of Religion The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism is part of an exercise in historical hypothesis testing in which Weber constructed a logical experiment using ideal types as conceptual tools. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 25
  • 26. Max Weber: Study of Religion Theology has an enormous impact on behavior---even economical and social behavior. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 26
  • 27. Max Weber: Study of Religion Occupational statistics in those nations of mixed religious composition seemed to show that those in higher socioeconomic positions were overwhelmingly Protestant. Weber was not attempting to prove a relationship between Protestantism and economic success (that was a given), but rather to explain the relationship. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 27
  • 28. Max Weber: Study of Religion Weber developed a historical ideal type called Spirit of Capitalism. This ideal type has four components: Work is valued as an end in itself Trade and profit are indicators of personal virtue A methodically organized life governed by reason indicates a righteous state of being Delayed gratification is a virtue Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 28
  • 29. Max Weber: Study of Religion Weber focused on the Calvinist’s form or Protestantism Calvinist’s theology/doctrine had four consequences on the Spirit of Capitalism: Predestination Lack of certainty of salvation created inner loneliness and isolation Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 29
  • 30. Max Weber: Study of Religion People looked for signs of being among the elect Absolute duty to consider themselves chosen Intense worldly activity creates self-confidence All believers were expected to lead methodical and ascetic lives unencumbered by irrational emotions, superstitions, or desires of the flesh Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 30
  • 31. Max Weber: Study of Religion Why did John Wesley call his group “Methodists?” Why do many evangelical and fundamentalist groups have “standards” and/or rules that appear rather “strict?” No dancing Avoid theaters, movies, dramas No card playing, use of dice of any kind Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 31
  • 32. Max Weber: Study of Religion Among the Calvinist and many of the other Protestant groups-----wealth was “automatically” accumulated through intense “economic activity” but was not to be “shown.” The accumulation was to be converted into “sound” assets. The Amish are a perfect illustration of the Spirit of Capitalism as studied by Weber. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 32
  • 33. Max Weber: Study of Religion Even though the strict nature of early Protestant groups are all but gone----the residues are evident in today’s society. Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 33
  • 34. Max Weber: Study of Religion Review Handout Weber’s Quasi-Experimental Design in the Study of Religion Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 34
  • 35. Max Weber: Class and Status Class and Status Method for studying stratification of populations for sociological purposes. Class “…property…and lack of property…” is the basis of all class situations Class is a type of socioeconomic category Rational behavior Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 35
  • 36. Max Weber: Class and Status Status Evaluations people make of one another Rank order of desired behavior and traits Value-oriented behavior Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 36
  • 37. Max Weber: Class and Status Examples If we use the class groups of low, blue collar, lower middle class, middle class, upper middle class, wealthy and the statuses of low, middle, high---what are the class and status levels of the following: College Presidents Teachers Medical Doctors Investment Bankers Pastors Sunday, October 21, 2012 © 1998-2006 by Ronald Keith Bolender 37

Notas do Editor

  1. (Turner, Beeghley, and Powers 1998:164-168)
  2. (Turner, Beeghley, and Powers 1998:164-168)
  3. This same thing is happening to many people who were originally from Mexico who become evangelical or Pentecostal in the United States. Refer to TV program.