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Max Weber 2

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Max Weber 2 Applying Sociological Knowledge Understanding Capitalism and Modernity ISSUES 1. Weber s view of modern society - The Iron Cage 2. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Max Weber 2


1
Max Weber 2
  • Applying Sociological Knowledge
  • Understanding Capitalism and Modernity

2
ISSUES
  • 1. Webers view of modern society
  • - The Iron Cage
  • 2. Weber applies his methods
  • - How good are his methods?
  • 3. Weber versus Marx
  • - Differences similarities

3
OUTLINE
  • Webers life
  • Webers view of modern society
  • Webers methods recap
  • Applying methods to modern society
  • Weber Marx
  • Weber the rise of capitalism
  • (Weber Marx again)
  • The Iron Cage
  • Evaluation

4
Webers Life
  • Born in Germany 1864 1920
  • Rapid social change / industrialisation
  • Development of government bureaucracy
  • Politics German nationalist
  • But anti-authoritarian
  • Studies history, economics, religious studies,
    sociology
  • Against positivism / For interpretivism

5
Webers view of modern society
  • Modernity very unlike other societies
  • 2) Capitalism (but view differs from Marxs)
  • - Psychology of capitalism
  • 3) Highly rationalised
  • Ways of thinking science, calculation
  • Beliefs secularisation
  • Ways of organising people bureaucracy

6
Webers Methods Recap
  • Interpretivism
  • Study what people think / why they act
  • Verstehen / Empathic understanding
  • Neo-Kantian methodology
  • Reality is complex
  • Must simplify reality
  • Must build ideal types e.g. bureaucracy

7
Webers Methods Recap
  • Sociology study of social action
  • 4 types of action
  • Habitual (traditional)
  • Affective (emotional)
  • Value rational (beliefs)
  • Instrumental (or goal) rational (calculation /
    efficiency)
  • Any actual action a mixture of some or all

8
Webers Methods Recap
  • Types of Authority
  • Authority legitimate power
  • Power of rulers to get ruled
  • to do things
  • Ruled see power of rulers as legitimate
  • 3 types of authority
  • Traditional / charismatic / legal-rational

9
Webers Methods Recap
  • Value freedom
  • All studies are biased must admit biases
  • Dont pass off your biases as the truth
  • Value relevance
  • Reality vastly complicated
  • Researcher must choose what to emphasise, what to
    downplay or miss out
  • Researchers interests shaped by personal
    cultural factors

10
Webers Methods Recap
  • One-sided viewpoints
  • Reality complicated multiple factors
  • Researcher can only look at some things
  • Any research is one-sided
  • 2 problems
  • Being unaware your research is one-sided
  • Passing off a one-sided viewpoint as the truth

11
Applying Methods to Modern Society
  • Development of modern society many factors
  • In one study must select some factors
  • e.g. Protestant Ethic study religious factors
  • Overall multi-dimensional analysis
  • Look at as many factors as possible
  • e.g. religion, economics, politics, bureaucracy
  • - Try to relate them all together

12
Applying Methods to Modern Society
  • Ideal Types
  • Reality complex must simplify
  • Ideal type perfect model of a thing
  • Allows us to
  • See things more clearly
  • Compare model against reality
  • Protestant Ethic
  • Spirit of Capitalism
  • Bureaucracy

13
Applying Methods to Modern Society
  • Wants to look at as many factors as possible
  • BUT inevitability of value relevance having to
    be selective
  • Webers focus (1) (of 3)
  • Look at ways people think their motivations for
    acting

14
Applying Methods to Modern Society
  • Emphasises role of new ways of thinking in
    creating a new sort of society
  • New ways of thinking motivate new ways of acting
  • New religion Protestantism (Luther, Calvin)
  • New way of thinking 1 more calculating mindset
  • New way of thinking 2 making money is moral
  • Protestant Ethic helps create new
  • Capitalist Spirit
  • - Calculating most efficient ways to make profits

15
Applying Methods to Modern Society
  • Webers focus (2)
  • Sees modern society as highly rational
  • 1) Dominance of instrumental rationality
    calculating most efficient ways of achieving
    goals
  • 2) Ways of thinking
  • - scientific mindset
  • - capitalist search for profit
  • 3) Social organisation bureaucracy
  • Emphasises rational factors
  • Downplays irrational factors

16
  • Webers focus (3)
  • Western Europe North America
  • since 16th century unique unprecedented social
    changes
  • most human history slow change, tradition
  • a) Rise of capitalist society
  • Industrialisation / new classes
  • capitalists workers
  • b) Secularisation
  • c) Democratisation

17
  • Focus (3)
  • WHY DID THESE CHANGES HAPPEN IN THE WEST AND
    NOWHERE ELSE??
  • Compare West to India, China Japan
  • Find what is unique to the West
  • Answer ways of thinking / religion
  • Eastern religions emphasise tradition / not
    dynamic / dont encourage social change
  • Western religions Judaism, Christianity /
    emphasise change social transformation
  • West is religiously dynamic, East static

18
Weber Marx
  • Ideal factors religion, values, ways of
    thinking, culture (superstructure)
  • Material factors economy, production, division
    of labour (economic base)
  • Marx material factors more important than ideal
    factors
  • Social change material factors change first,
    then ideal factors follow
  • Changes in economic base ? changes in social
    superstructure

19
Marx the rise of capitalist society
  • Changes in Economic Base
  • 1) New technology from farming to factories
  • 2) New classes capitalists workers
  • 3) Capitalists take wealth power
  • away from aristocracy
  • LEADS TO
  • Changes in Social superstructure
  • (i.e. changes in all other parts of society
  • e.g. politics, law, family, media, etc.)

20
Webers criticisms of Marx
  • Marx has a one-sided viewpoint
  • Emphasises material factors
  • Thinks this is the whole story
  • OVERemphasises material factors
  • 2) UNDERemphasises ideal factors
  • Especially religion Protestantism
  • Doesnt examine new ways of thinking, new
    motivations
  • Weber corrects this in Protestant Ethic study

21
  • 3) Marx is not multi-dimensional enough
  • a) Emphasises economic factors
  • But reality is complex many factors involved
  • b) Must also look at political and cultural
    factors (especially, but not only, religion)
  • c) Marxs story only starts in the 16th century
    must go back much further in time
  • Rational thinking in West since ancient Greeks
  • Bureaucracy since the ancient Romans
  • Medieval Catholic Church is a bureaucracy

22
Weber the rise of capitalism
  • PROTESTANT ETHIC (PE)
  • 16th century northern Europe
  • Rebellion against Catholic teaching
  • Luther and Calvin
  • More pure version of Christianity
  • Calvin damned and saved
  • Chosen at birth
  • Psychological anxiety (salvation anxiety)
  • Do good works work hard

23
EFFECTS OF PE ON SOCIETY
  • Medieval economy
  • - subsistence economy
  • Attitudes
  • - leisure more important than work
  • work a necessary evil
  • making money is immoral

24
  • Protestant Ethic (PE)
  • - work hard to show you are good
  • - making money a sign of virtue
  • Over time work hard make money
  • Spirit of Capitalism (SC)
  • secular version of PE
  • becomes automatic no religious aspect
  • PE leads to SC leads to social transformation

25
Spirit of Capitalism
  • Main aim in life work hard, seek profits
  • Capitalism exists in many societies,
  • including pre-modern societies
  • e.g. piracy make money by stealing
  • 3) Modern capitalism (Spirit of Capitalism)
  • Never-ending search for profits
  • Calculate most efficient methods
  • Keep accurate records book-keeping
  • Dont waste profits reinvest in business
  • Time is money

26
Weber Marx again
  • DISAGREEMENTS
  • Marx material factors (economic base)
  • Weber ideal factors as important (religion,
    Protestant Ethic) as material factors
  • Weber
  • 1) Marxs view TOO one-sided
  • 2) Marx created an ideal-type (base-superstructure
    model )
  • BUT Marx forgets its just a model, just one way
    of looking at things
  • 3) Marx stresses class over other types of social
    group
  • e.g. gender-based, ethnic-based, status-based

27
Weber Marx again
  • PARTIAL AGREEMENTS
  • Weber Marx right to look at economic factors
  • (appearance of new classes new technology)
  • Weber must look at BOTH material and ideal
    factors
  • Weber Marx on the right track but not
    multi-dimensional enough
  • Weber against Marx?
  • Weber correcting Marxs limitations
  • Weber adds to Marx

28
The Iron Cage
  • Modern society created by rationalization
  • processes
  • 1) Increasing levels of instrumental rationality
  • Scientific mindset
  • Decline of religious belief
  • (Disenchantment of the world)
  • Instrumental rationality (calculation) KILLS OFF
    value rationality (beliefs values, esp.
    religious)

29
The Iron Cage
  • 2) Increasing bureaucratisation
  • Bureaucracy ideal type
  • a) Organising people with written rules
  • b) Rules enforced impersonally
  • c) Hierarchical organisation
  • d) Specialisation of tasks
  • Bureaucrats rule
  • Spread of bureaucracy into all spheres of life
  • e.g. family, private life

30
The Iron Cage
  • 3) Increasing impersonalization of social
    relations
  • a) Calculation, not imagination feelings
  • b) Actions more and more automatic
  • Work hard, without knowing why
  • Seek money, at expense of other things
  • c) Division of labour
  • Everyone is a specialist
  • One-sided personalities
  • (all people, not just workers)

31
The Iron Cage
  • SOLUTIONS
  • Marx Communism
  • - Government controls economy
  • More and more bureaucracy
  • Weber
  • - try to salvage whatever individual freedoms are
    left
  • - not much chance of this

32
EVALUATION
  • PROS
  • More detailed account of rise of modernity than
    Marx
  • ? more sophisticated than Marx?
  • 2) Deals with more factors
  • than Marx
  • material AND ideal
  • goes back further in history
  • 3) Sophisticated methods
  • (including admitting his own biases)

33
CONS1) Too pessimistic about modern
society?2) Breaks His Own Rules? - Gives a
very negative one-sided account of modern
society- Presents it as the truth3) Problems
with methods ? problems with his view of rise
and nature of modern society
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