Sunday, July 31, 2011
Weber August 1 Reading
The Protestant Ethic
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Comments for 7/28
Today's second reading made me reflect upon the nature of religion. We're used to associating it with elaborate godheads and intricate systems of belief with some form of ecclesiastical authority. But religion can also be a much broader topic, like Durkheim himself discussed in our earlier reading. In the past, religion was everything, and today individualism is no different. Its omnipresence in our commercial society is just as potent as the papacy in late Rome. And Durkheim goes so far as to suggest that our abhorrence when rights are disregarded is a positively modern notion, a profane offense against our new god. But this new god is not like the past gods who transcended human authority, rather it is a god composed of man, acting in accordance with Kant's Categorical Imperative. For Durkheim, the writings of Kant and Rousseau created a quasi-religious idol in the form of the idealized and individualized man, acting with respect to the collectivized interests of each self-determining fellowman in his society.
But, this god is no less artificial and necessarily evil than the past ones. Durkheim believes that the necessary inflexibility of the axioms of our individualized religion prevent us from treating our moral wounds; we cannot utilitarianly aid the whole without occasionally suspending the individual rights of the few.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Two Evils
In discussing the pathological forms that are born out of the division of labor, one sticks out of Emile Durkheim’s concepts. This form takes hold in the concept that as people specialize in his or her specific field that he or she becomes isolated from society as a whole. Durkheim links the division of labor to disintegration and also discusses the concepts of whether or not it is best to specialize or be what we discussed in class to be a “renaissance man.”
In thinking more on this, I think Durkheim raises a very well argued point in regards to how people will become overtly obsessed with one specific thing and isolate themselves from the rest of the field, but I also believe that this concept may just be a bit too extreme for me to fully accept. I stand behind what I said in class that without specialization those certain fields, such as medicine and history, would suffer from generalization and not be in the state it is today.
Ultimately, the division of labor suffers and thrives at the same time. Although people are specializing and finding isolation, they are also paving the way for the future and advancements in every field. We find ourselves “isolated” but also far more educated in every field. What is the lesser of these two evils?
Durkheim: Anomic Division of Labor
The first pathological form that results from the division of labor, according to Durkheim, is the anomic division of labor. This fairly common, negative aspect of the division of labor occurs when the individuals become isolated by their repetitive, specialized tasks, and forget that they are parts of the whole, i.e. society. Examples of this occur in industries and factories which detach workers from their employers. In order to fix this anomic division of labor, the conditions present in a state of organic solidarity must be determined. This state of interdependency would exist once the specialized workers became directly dependent on one another. This would form a complex division of labor strongly resembling an organism. The groups of people would act as organs engaging in repetitive, definite actions which contribute essential functions to the entire organism. When this state of organic solidarity is formed, problems such as anomie are rectified.