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This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
This new edition introduces the social science audiences of a new
century to one of the classic highlights of the mid-twentieth
century. This is the most general statement of the general theory
of action as it was developed by its principle exponent, Talcott
Parsons, and his close collaborators who formed the core of the
fabled department of social relations at Harvard University. Toward
a General Theory of Action is an extremely ambitious formulation of
the ingredients, dimensions, and ranges that determine human
behavior. Parsons and Shils enunciate principles that are at the
core of contemporary social science preoccupations-including the
precarious balance between social integration and conflict. The
volume is at once universal in intent and highly personal, an
expression of Parsons' thought, one of the most notable
sociological theorists of the century. Finally, the book symbolizes
the interdisciplinary impulse that typified a widespread belief in
the unity of the sciences. This edition includes the collaborative
group's introductory statement, Richard Sheldon's essay on the
theoretical and philosophical status of the general theory of
action, and "Values, Motives and Systems of Action" by Parsons and
Shils. Guy Swanson, writing in the The American Sociological
Review, noted that "Parsons and Shils have performed a major
service in clearing away many old controversies, in showing the
reasonableness of a behavioral foundation for general theory in
social science as a whole and in sociology in particular, in
clarifying the interrelations among many concepts, and in the
insightful interpretation of particular pieces of data." It is
testimony to this book's continuing significance that it continues
to generate new lines of research and writings.
Never before published, "American Society" is the product of
Talcott Parsons 's last major theory-building project. During the
1970s, Parsons worked persistently to fulfill his earlier promise
to produce a general book on American society. The surviving
manuscript, completed just a few weeks before his death, is just
such a book and much more. Beyond its rich reading of American
society, it offers a systematic presentation and major revisions of
his previous landmark theoretical positions: the attempt to
elaborate a non-nostalgic theory of modernity, to link macro and
micro perspectives, to defend the possibility of objective
sociological knowledge, to analyze national specificities within
the context of worldwide trends, to develop an adequate conception
of societal integration grounded in fully pluralistic premises.
Even after the passage of many years, the book imparts a remarkably
provocative interpretation of U.S. society and a creative approach
to social theory.
Never before published, "American Society" is the product of
Talcott Parsons 's last major theory-building project. During the
1970s, Parsons worked persistently to fulfill his earlier promise
to produce a general book on American society. The surviving
manuscript, completed just a few weeks before his death, is just
such a book and much more. Beyond its rich reading of American
society, it offers a systematic presentation and major revisions of
his previous landmark theoretical positions: the attempt to
elaborate a non-nostalgic theory of modernity, to link macro and
micro perspectives, to defend the possibility of objective
sociological knowledge, to analyze national specificities within
the context of worldwide trends, to develop an adequate conception
of societal integration grounded in fully pluralistic premises.
Even after the passage of many years, the book imparts a remarkably
provocative interpretation of U.S. society and a creative approach
to social theory.
This new edition introduces the social science audiences of a
new century to one of the classic highlights of the mid-twentieth
century. This is the most general statement of the general theory
of action as it was developed by its principle exponent, Talcott
Parsons, and his close collaborators who formed the core of the
fabled department of social relations at Harvard University. Toward
a General Theory of Action is an extremely ambitious formulation of
the ingredients, dimensions, and ranges that determine human
behavior.
Parsons and Shils enunciate principles that are at the core of
contemporary social science preoccupations-including the precarious
balance between social integration and conflict. The volume is at
once universal in intent and highly personal, an expression of
Parsons' thought, one of the most notable sociological theorists of
the century. Finally, the book symbolizes the interdisciplinary
impulse that typified a widespread belief in the unity of the
sciences. This edition includes the collaborative group's
introductory statement, Richard Sheldon's essay on the theoretical
and philosophical status of the general theory of action, and
"Values, Motives and Systems of Action" by Parsons and Shils.
Guy Swanson, writing in the The American Sociological Review,
noted that "Parsons and Shils have performed a major service in
clearing away many old controversies, in showing the reasonableness
of a behavioral foundation for general theory in social science as
a whole and in sociology in particular, in clarifying the
interrelations among many concepts, and in the insightful
interpretation of particular pieces of data." It is testimony to
this book's continuing significance that it continues to generate
new lines of research and writings.
During the years between the publication of the first of his two
major works, The Structure of Social Action (1937), and the writing
of his second, The Social System (1951), Talcott Parsons was
primarily engaged in political activity through the Office of
Strategic Services in its efforts to bring about the defeat of the
Third Reich and to set the stage for a democratic reconstruction of
postwar Germany. Beyond Parsons' analytic skills the essays reveal
a dedicated liberal scholar, far removed from the stereotypes with
which he came to be pilloried by later critics. The essays in this
collection are the by-products of that special period of intense
commitment. They reflect a single dominant theme: National
Socialist Germany is seen as a tragically flawed social system but
one requiring the same rigorous analysis Parsons brought to more
normal and normative systems. Since virulent authoritarianism and
even more virulent anti-Semitism were the dominant traits of that
system as he saw it, Parsons dedicated many pages to each aspect.
While he did not know the full horror of the Nazi "war against the
Jews" he was able to develop a theoretical framework that continues
to be a foundation stone for the analysis of national socialism.
Gerhardt's editorial labors in the Parsons archive at Harvard have
yielded nothing less than a "new book" by the foremost American
sociological theorist of his time. This collection of both
published and unpublished writings conveys Parsons' cohesive
intent. To these otherwise fugitive and neglected essays Gerhardt
contributes an introductory essay of her own: in part biography, in
part intellectual and social history. She discovered Parsons work
on National Socialism while studying his sociology of the
professions and his use of medical practice to demonstrate how
social science could become an antidote for fascism and
authoritarianism. Uta Gerhardt is director of the Medical Sociology
Unit at Justus Liebig University, Giessen. She has taught sociology
at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Konstanz, the
University of California at Berkeley, the San Francisco Medical
School, the University of London, and the University of Wisconsin
at Madison. The present volume comes out of her sabbatical year as
Research Affiliate of the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European
Studies, of Harvard University.
Dieser Band vereinigt grundlegende Texte von Talcott Parsons zur
Theorie sozialer Systeme. Sie bilden den Ausgangspunkt der
systemtheoretisch orientierten Soziologie und sind nach wie vor
„eine bleibende Herausforderung für alle weitere Arbeit an
soziologischer Theorie“ (Niklas Luhmann).
During the years between the publication of the first of his two
major works, "The Structure of Social Action "(1937), and the
writing of his second, "The Social System "(1951), Talcott Parsons
was primarily engaged in political activity through the Office of
Strategic Services in its efforts to bring about the defeat of the
Third Reich and to set the stage for a democratic reconstruction of
postwar Germany. Beyond Parsons' analytic skills the essays reveal
a dedicated liberal scholar, far removed from the stereotypes with
which he came to be pilloried by later critics.
The essays in this collection are the by-products of that special
period of intense commitment. They reflect a single dominant theme:
National Socialist Germany is seen as a tragically flawed social
system but one requiring the same rigorous analysis Parsons brought
to more normal and normative systems. Since virulent
authoritarianism and even more virulent anti-Semitism were the
dominant traits of that system as he saw it, Parsons dedicated many
pages to each aspect. While he did not know the full horror of the
Nazi "war against the Jews" he was able to develop a theoretical
framework that continues to be a foundation stone for the analysis
of national socialism.
Gerhardt's editorial labors in the Parsons archive at Harvard have
yielded nothing less than a "new book" by the foremost American
sociological theorist of his time. This collection of both
published and unpublished writings conveys Parsons' cohesive
intent. To these otherwise fugitive and neglected essays Gerhardt
contributes an introductory essay of her own: in part biography, in
part intellectual and social history. She discovered Parsons work
on National Socialism while studying his sociology of the
professions and his use of medical practice to demonstrate how
social science could become an antidote for fascism and
authoritarianism.
"Uta Gerhardt" is director of the Medical Sociology Unit at Justus
Liebig University, Giessen. She has taught sociology at the Free
University of Berlin, the University of Konstanz, the University of
California at Berkeley, the San Francisco Medical School, the
University of London, and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
The present volume comes out of her sabbatical year as Research
Affiliate of the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, of
Harvard University.
This book brings together, in systematic and generalized form, the
main outlines of a conceptual scheme for the analysis of the
structure and processes of social systems. It carries out Pareto's
intention by using the "structural-functional" level of analysis.
Talcott Parsons is regarded, by admirers and critics alike, as a
major creator of the sociological thought of our time. Despite the
universal recognition of his influence, however, Parsons's thought
is not well understood, in part because his work presents the
reader with almost legendary difficulties. Most of his important
essays and books presume that the reader is familiar with his
rather specialized vocabulary, and even when Parsons begins by
defining basic terms, his special uses for words and his style of
exposition strike many readers as forbidding.
In his extensive introduction to this volume, Leon H. Mayhew brings
a new focus and clarity to Talcott Parsons's work. Explicating
Parsons on his own terms, Mayhew discusses the basic tools of
Parsonian analysis and interprets the larger themes of his work. He
provides a chronological account of the development of Parsons's
thought, his presuppositions, and his position on the ideological
spectrum of social thought.
Mayhew then presents twenty of Parsons's essays, touching on each
of the major aspects of his work, including "action" theory and the
celebrated four-function scheme. Other topics covered include the
role of theory in social research, evolutionary universals in
society, influence, control, and the mass media.
"Talcott Parsons on Institutions and Social Evolution will become a
standard reference for those studying that development of his
sociological ideas."--Martin Bulmer, "The Times Higher Education
Supplement
"
2010 Reprint of 1930 First English edition.Considered a founding
text in economic sociology and sociology in general, Weber's book
was translated into English for the first time by Talcott Parsons
and appeared in 1930. We reprint this 1930 Edition. Weber believed
that capitalism in northern Europe evolved when the Protestant
(particularly Calvinist) ethic influenced large numbers of people
to engage in work in the secular world, developing their own
enterprises and engaging in trade and the accumulation of wealth
for investment. In other words, the Protestant ethic was a force
behind an unplanned and uncoordinated mass action that influenced
the development of capitalism. This idea is also known as "the
Weber thesis." Weber, however, rejected deterministic approaches,
and presented the Protestant Ethic as merely one in a number of
'elective affinities' leading toward capitalist modernity. Weber's
term Protestant work ethic has become very widely known. The work
relates significantly to the cultural "rationalization" and
so-called "disenchantment" which Weber associated with the modern
West.
Die Theorie der sozialen Interaktionsmedien gilt als einer der
bedeutendsten Beitrage zur sozialwissenschaftlichen Theoriebildung.
In Analogie zu Geld als spezifischem Medium des oekonomischen
Tausches interpretiert Parsons zunachst Macht als symbolisch
generalisiertes Medium mit der spezifischen politischen Funktion
der Festlegung und Umsetzung kollektiver Ziele, womit er sich in
Gegensatz zur utilitaristischen Tradition stellt, fur die Macht ein
Mittel zur Durchsetzung individueller Interessen ist. Dies
impliziert auch eine qualitative Unterschiedlichkeit von Geld und
Macht, die einen zentralen Gedanken in der weiteren Ausarbeitung
von sozialen Medien wie Einfluss und kulturellen Commitments
darstellt.
1. Vorbemerkung Dieser Band bildet den Anschlug an die
vorangegangene Aufsatz 1 Sammlung Talcott Parsons' zur Theorie
sozialer Systeme . Wahrend es sich bei dem friiheren Band urn
einige der wichtigsten Beitrage Parsons' zur soziologischen
Systemtheorie handelt, stellen die folgen den vier Aufsatze den
theoretisch originarsten und bedeutsamsten Beitrag zur
sozialwissenschaftlichen Theoriebildung iiberhaupt dar, den Parsons
in den letzten fiinfzehn J ahren entwickelt hat? Worum handelt es
sich bei diesen "sozialen Interaktions-Me dien"? Auf den ersten
Blick geht es urn die Analyse der Phanomene "Geld," "Macht,"
"Einflug" und "Wertbindung." Diese Phanomene - vor allem Geld und
Macht - bilden jedoch nur die auffalligsten Elemente einer ganzen
Klasse von sozialen Mechanismen, die die Interaktion von Menschen
in der Gesellschaft steuern. In der Analyse dieser sozialen
Steuerungsmechanismen - der sozialen Interaktions Medien - geht es
Parsons also nicht nur urn die Behandlung der genannten Phanomene,
sondern urn den paradigmatischen Aufbau eines Theorieschemas fiir
derartige Mechanismen iiberhaupt. Auf den ersten Blick konnte es
scheinen, als habe Parsons damit seinen bisherigen Arbeitsbereich -
die Theorie der Sozialsystem- verlassen und sich einem neuen Feld
zugewandt, namlich der Theorie der sozialen Interaktion.
Tatsachlich kann aber von einer Verlage rung des Arbeitsinteresses
Parsons' gar keine Rede sein. Nach wie vor geht es ihm darum, die
Theorie der Sozialsysteme so zu vervoll kommnen, dag sie eine
umfassende und brauchbare Theorie aller sozialen Phanomene wird.
Bei diesem Vorhaben lassen sich drei Hauptphasen unterscheiden. 7
1."
1. Vorbemerkung Dieser Band vereinigt eine Reihe von grundlegenden
Aufsatzen Tal- cott Parsons' zur Theorie der Sozialsysteme. Diese
Aufsatze geben zwar nur einen kleinen Ausschnitt aus dem Gesamtwerk
von Parsons wieder. Dabei handelt es sich allerdings urn den
wichtigsten und grundlegendsten Teil, ohne dessen Kenntnis eine
Beurteilung der Theorie Parsons' iiberhaupt nicht moglich ist.
Diesem Band wird in Kiirze ein zweiter folgen, der einige Beitrage
Parsons zur Theorie der Interaktionsmedien sowie einen Beitrag von
Niklas Luhmann zu diesem Thema enthalt (1). Die Herausgabe der
beiden Bande zur Theorie der Sozialsysteme und der Theorie der
Interaktionsmedien ist ein Versuch, die Auseinandersetzungen mit
der gesellschaftlichen Systemtheorie (2) auf der Grundlagen- ebene
zu erganzen. Dieses Buch und seine Einleitung wendet sich vor aHem
an Stud en- ten und andere Leser, die Parsons noch nicht oder nur
wenig kennen. Man konnte freilich - iiberspitzt - sagen, d kaum
jemand Parsons wirklich kennt. Einer der Hauptgriinde dafiir liegt
in dem Umfang seiner Arbeiten, ein anderer in der Schwierigkeit
jedes Versuchs, Parsons' theoretische Argumente im ersten Anlauf zu
begreifen. Daher sind viele Argumente verkiirzt oder aufgrund von
Rezeptionen aus zweiter oder dritter Hand zur Kenntnis genommen
worden. Dabei haben sie sich mit zahlreichen Vorurteilen vermischt
(3), so d vielfach die bestehenden Kenntnisse iiber Parsons ein
Konglo- merat aus theoretischen und ideologischen Argumenten
darstellen.
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