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Émile Durkheim

David Émile Durkheim (French: [emil dyʁkɛm] or [dyʁkajm], professionally known simply as Émile Durkheim;[1] 15 April 1858 – 15 November 1917) was a French sociologist. Durkheim formally established the academic discipline of sociology and is commonly cited as one of the principal architects of modern social science, along with both Karl Marx and Max Weber.[2][3]

Much of Durkheim's work was concerned with how societies can maintain their integrity and coherence in modernity, an era in which traditional social and religious ties are much less universal, and in which new social institutions have come into being. Durkheim's conception of the scientific study of society laid the groundwork for modern sociology, and he used such scientific tools as statistics, surveys, and historical observation in his analysis of suicides in Catholic and Protestant groups.

Durkheim's first major sociological work was De la division du travail social (1893; The Division of Labour in Society), followed in 1895 by Les Règles de la méthode sociologique (The Rules of Sociological Method), the same year in which Durkheim set up the first European department of sociology and became France's first professor of sociology.[4] Durkheim's seminal monograph, Le Suicide (1897), a study of suicide rates in Catholic and Protestant populations, especially pioneered modern social research, serving to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy. The following year, in 1898, he established the journal L'Année Sociologique. Les formes élémentaires de la vie religieuse (1912; The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life) presented a theory of religion, comparing the social and cultural lives of aboriginal and modern societies.

Durkheim was deeply preoccupied with the acceptance of sociology as a legitimate science. He refined the positivism originally set forth by Auguste Comte, promoting what could be considered as a form of epistemological realism, as well as the use of the hypothetico-deductive model in social science. For Durkheim, sociology was the science of institutions, understanding the term in its broader meaning as the "beliefs and modes of behaviour instituted by the collectivity,"[5] with its aim being to discover structural social facts. As such, Durkheim was a major proponent of structural functionalism, a foundational perspective in both sociology and anthropology. In his view, social science should be purely holistic[i] in the sense that sociology should study phenomena attributed to society at large, rather than being limited to the study of specific actions of individuals.

He remained a dominant force in French intellectual life until his death in 1917, presenting numerous lectures and published works on a variety of topics, including the sociology of knowledge, morality, social stratification, religion, law, education, and deviance. Some terms that he coined, such as "collective consciousness", are now also used by laypeople.[6]

Biography edit

Early life and heritage edit

David Émile Durkheim was born 15 April 1858 in Épinal, Lorraine, France, to Mélanie (Isidor) and Moïse Durkheim,[7][8] coming into a long lineage of devout French Jews. As his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather had all been rabbis,[9]: 1  young Durkheim began his education in a rabbinical school. However at an early age he switched schools, deciding not to follow in his family's footsteps.[10][9]: 1  In fact Durkheim led a completely secular life, whereby much of his work was dedicated to demonstrating that religious phenomena stemmed from social rather than divine factors. Nevertheless Durkheim did not sever ties with his family nor with the Jewish community.[9]: 1  In fact many of his most prominent collaborators and students were Jewish, some even being blood relatives. For instance Marcel Mauss, a notable social anthropologist of the prewar era was his nephew.[2]

Education edit

A precocious student, Durkheim entered the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in 1879, at his third attempt.[10][9]: 2  The entering class that year was one of the most brilliant of the nineteenth century, as many of his classmates, such as Jean Jaurès and Henri Bergson, went on to become major figures in France's intellectual history as well. At the ENS, Durkheim studied under the direction of Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges, a classicist with a social-scientific outlook, and wrote his Latin dissertation on Montesquieu.[11] At the same time, he read Auguste Comte and Herbert Spencer, whereby Durkheim became interested in a scientific approach to society very early on in his career.[10] This meant the first of many conflicts with the French academic system, which had no social science curriculum at the time. Durkheim found humanistic studies uninteresting, turning his attention from psychology and philosophy to ethics and, eventually, sociology.[10] He obtained his agrégation in philosophy in 1882, though finishing next to last in his graduating class owing to serious illness the year before.[12]

The opportunity for Durkheim to receive a major academic appointment in Paris was inhibited by his approach to society. From 1882 to 1887 he taught philosophy at several provincial schools.[13] In 1885 he decided to leave for Germany, where for two years he studied sociology at the universities of Marburg, Berlin and Leipzig.[13] As Durkheim indicated in several essays, it was in Leipzig that he learned to appreciate the value of empiricism and its language of concrete, complex things, in sharp contrast to the more abstract, clear and simple ideas of the Cartesian method.[14] By 1886, as part of his doctoral dissertation, he had completed the draft of his The Division of Labour in Society, and was working towards establishing the new science of sociology.[13]

Academic career edit

 
A collection of Durkheim's courses on the origins of socialism (1896), edited and published by his nephew, Marcel Mauss, in 1928

Durkheim's period in Germany resulted in the publication of numerous articles on German social science and philosophy; Durkheim was particularly impressed by the work of Wilhelm Wundt.[13] Durkheim's articles gained recognition in France, and he received a teaching appointment in the University of Bordeaux in 1887, where he was to teach the university's first social science course.[13] His official title was Chargé d'un Cours de Science Sociale et de Pédagogie, thus he taught both pedagogy and sociology (the latter having never been taught in France before).[4][9]: 3  The appointment of the social scientist to the mostly humanistic faculty was an important sign of changing times and the growing importance and recognition of the social sciences.[13] From this position Durkheim helped reform the French school system, introducing the study of social science in its curriculum. However, his controversial beliefs that religion and morality could be explained in terms purely of social interaction earned him many critics.[citation needed]

Also in 1887, Durkheim married Louise Dreyfus. They had two children, Marie and André.[4]

The 1890s were a period of remarkable creative output for Durkheim.[13] In 1893, he published The Division of Labour in Society, his doctoral dissertation and fundamental statement of the nature of human society and its development.[9]: x  Durkheim's interest in social phenomena was spurred on by politics. France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War led to the fall of the regime of Napoleon III, which was then replaced by the Third Republic. This in turn resulted in a backlash against the new secular and republican rule, as many people considered a vigorously nationalistic approach necessary to rejuvenate France's fading power. Durkheim, a Jew and a staunch supporter of the Third Republic with a sympathy towards socialism, was thus in the political minority, a situation that galvanized him politically. The Dreyfus affair of 1894 only strengthened his activist stance.[15]

In 1895, he published The Rules of Sociological Method,[13] a manifesto stating what sociology is and how it ought to be done, and founded the first European department of sociology at the University of Bordeaux. In 1898, he founded L'Année Sociologique, the first French social science journal.[13] Its aim was to publish and publicize the work of what was, by then, a growing number of students and collaborators (this is also the name used to refer to the group of students who developed his sociological program). In 1897, he published Suicide, a case study that provided an example of what a sociological monograph might look like. Durkheim was one of the pioneers of the use of quantitative methods in criminology, which he used in his study of suicide.[citation needed]

By 1902, Durkheim had finally achieved his goal of attaining a prominent position in Paris when he became the chair of education at the Sorbonne. Durkheim had aimed for the position earlier, but the Parisian faculty took longer to accept what some called "sociological imperialism" and admit social science to their curriculum.[15] He became a full professor (specifically, Professor of the Science of Education) there in 1906, and in 1913 he was named chair in "Education and Sociology".[4][15] Because French universities are technically institutions for training secondary school teachers, this position gave Durkheim considerable influence—his lectures were the only ones that were mandatory for the entire student body. Durkheim had much influence over the new generation of teachers; around that time he also served as an advisor to the Ministry of Education.[4] In 1912, he published his last major work, The Elementary Forms of The Religious Life.

Death edit

 
Grave of Émile Durkheim, the founder of sociology, in Montparnasse Cemetery, Paris, France.

The outbreak of World War I was to have a tragic effect on Durkheim's life. His leftism was always patriotic rather than internationalist, in that he sought a secular, rational form of French life. However, the onset of the war, and the inevitable nationalist propaganda that followed, made it difficult to sustain this already nuanced position. While Durkheim actively worked to support his country in the war, his reluctance to give in to simplistic nationalist fervor (combined with his Jewish background) made him a natural target of the now-ascendant French Right. Even more seriously, the generations of students that Durkheim had trained were now being drafted to serve in the army, many of them perishing in the trenches.[citation needed]

Finally, Durkheim's own son, André, died on the war front in December 1915—a loss from which Durkheim never recovered.[15][16] Emotionally devastated, Durkheim collapsed of a stroke in Paris two years later, on 15 November 1917.[16] He was buried at the Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris.[17]

Methodology edit

 
Cover of the French edition of The Rules of Sociological Method (1919)

In The Rules of Sociological Method (1895), Durkheim expressed his will to establish a method that would guarantee sociology's truly scientific character. One of the questions raised concerns the objectivity of the sociologist: how may one study an object that, from the very beginning, conditions and relates to the observer? According to Durkheim, observation must be as impartial and impersonal as possible, even though a "perfectly objective observation" in this sense may never be attained. A social fact must always be studied according to its relation with other social facts, never according to the individual who studies it. Sociology should therefore privilege comparison rather than the study of singular independent facts.[ii]

Durkheim sought to create one of the first rigorous scientific approaches to social phenomena. Along with Herbert Spencer, he was one of the first people to explain the existence and quality of different parts of a society by reference to what function they served in maintaining the quotidian (i.e. by how they make society "work"). He also agreed with Spencer's organic analogy, comparing society to a living organism.[13] Thus his work is sometimes seen as a precursor to functionalism.[10][18][19][20] Durkheim also insisted that society was more than the sum of its parts.[iii][21]

Unlike his contemporaries Ferdinand Tönnies and Max Weber, he did not focus on what motivates the actions of individuals (an approach associated with methodological individualism), but rather on the study of social facts.

Inspirations edit

During his university studies at the ENS, Durkheim was influenced by two neo-Kantian scholars: Charles Bernard Renouvier and Émile Boutroux.[10] The principles Durkheim absorbed from them included rationalism, scientific study of morality, anti-utilitarianism, and secular education.[13] His methodology was influenced by Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges, a supporter of the scientific method.[13]

Comte edit

A fundamental influence on Durkheim's thought was the sociological positivism of Auguste Comte, who effectively sought to extend and apply the scientific method found in the natural sciences to the social sciences.[13] According to Comte, a true social science should stress empirical facts, as well as induce general scientific laws from the relationship among these facts. There were many points on which Durkheim agreed with the positivist thesis:

  • First, he accepted that the study of society was to be founded on an examination of facts.
  • Second, like Comte, he acknowledged that the only valid guide to objective knowledge was the scientific method.
  • Third, he agreed with Comte that the social sciences could become scientific only when they were stripped of their metaphysical abstractions.[13]

Realism edit

A second influence on Durkheim's view of society beyond Comte's positivism was the epistemological outlook called social realism. Although he never explicitly espoused it, Durkheim adopted a realist perspective in order to demonstrate the existence of social realities outside the individual and to show that these realities existed in the form of the objective relations of society.[22] As an epistemology of science, realism can be defined as a perspective that takes as its central point of departure the view that external social realities exist in the outer world and that these realities are independent of the individual's perception of them.

This view opposes other predominant philosophical perspectives such as empiricism and positivism. Empiricists, like David Hume, had argued that all realities in the outside world are products of human sense perception, thus all realities are merely perceived: they do not exist independently of our perceptions, and have no causal power in themselves.[22] Comte's positivism went a step further by claiming that scientific laws could be deduced from empirical observations. Going beyond this, Durkheim claimed that sociology would not only discover "apparent" laws, but would be able to discover the inherent nature of society.

Judaism edit

Scholars also debate the exact influence of Jewish thought on Durkheim's work. The answer remains uncertain; some scholars have argued that Durkheim's thought is a form of secularized Jewish thought,[iv][23] while others argue that proving the existence of a direct influence of Jewish thought on Durkheim's achievements is difficult or impossible.[24]

Durkheim and theory edit

Throughout his career, Durkheim was concerned primarily with three goals. First, to establish sociology as a new academic discipline.[15] Second, to analyse how societies could maintain their integrity and coherence in the modern era, when things such as shared religious and ethnic background could no longer be assumed. To that end he wrote much about the effect of laws, religion, education and similar forces on society and social integration.[15][25] Lastly, Durkheim was concerned with the practical implications of scientific knowledge.[15] The importance of social integration is expressed throughout Durkheim's work:[26][27]

For if society lacks the unity that derives from the fact that the relationships between its parts are exactly regulated, that unity resulting from the harmonious articulation of its various functions assured by effective discipline and if, in addition, society lacks the unity based upon the commitment of men's wills to a common objective, then it is no more than a pile of sand that the least jolt or the slightest puff will suffice to scatter.

— Moral Education (1925)

Establishing sociology edit

Durkheim authored some of the most programmatic statements on what sociology is and how it should be practiced.[10] His concern was to establish sociology as a science.[28] Arguing for a place for sociology among other sciences, he wrote, "sociology is, then, not an auxiliary of any other science; it is itself a distinct and autonomous science."[29]

To give sociology a place in the academic world and to ensure that it is a legitimate science, it must have an object that is clear and distinct from philosophy or psychology, and its own methodology.[15] He argued that "there is in every society a certain group of phenomena which may be differentiated from those studied by the other natural sciences."[30]: 95 

In the Tarde-Durkeim debate of 1903, the "anthropological view" of Gabriel Tarde was ridiculed and hastily dismissed.[citation needed]

A fundamental aim of sociology is to discover structural "social facts".[15][31]: 13  The establishment of sociology as an independent, recognized academic discipline is among Durkheim's largest and most lasting legacies.[2] Within sociology, his work has significantly influenced structuralism or structural functionalism.[2][32]

Social facts edit

A social fact is every way of acting, fixed or not, capable of exercising on the individual an external constraint; or again, every way of acting which is general throughout a given society, while at the same time existing in its own right independent of its individual manifestations.

— The Rules of Sociological Method[31]

Durkheim's work revolved around the study of social facts, a term he coined to describe phenomena that have an existence in and of themselves, are not bound to the actions of individuals, but have a coercive influence upon them.[33] Durkheim argued that social facts have, sui generis, an independent existence greater and more objective than the actions of the individuals that compose society.[34] Only such social facts can explain the observed social phenomena.[10] Being exterior to the individual person, social facts may thus also exercise coercive power on the various people composing society, as it can sometimes be observed in the case of formal laws and regulations, but also in situations implying the presence of informal rules, such as religious rituals or family norms.[31][35] Unlike the facts studied in natural sciences, a social fact thus refers to a specific category of phenomena: "the determining cause of a social fact must be sought among the antecedent social facts and not among the states of the individual consciousness."[citation needed]

Such facts are endowed with a power of coercion, by reason of which they may control individual behaviors.[35] According to Durkheim, these phenomena cannot be reduced to biological or psychological grounds.[35] Social facts can be material (i.e. physical objects ) or immaterial (i.e. meanings, sentiments, etc.).[34] Though the latter cannot be seen or touched, they are external and coercive, thus becoming real and gaining "facticity".[34] Physical objects, too, can represent both material and immaterial social facts. For example, a flag is a physical social fact that is often ingrained with various immaterial social facts (e.g. its meaning and importance).[34]

Many social facts, however, have no material form.[34] Even the most "individualistic" or "subjective" phenomena, such as love, freedom, or suicide, were regarded by Durkheim as objective social facts.[34] Individuals composing society do not directly cause suicide: suicide, as a social fact, exists independently in society, and is caused by other social facts—such as rules governing behavior and group attachment—whether an individual likes it or not.[34][36] Whether a person "leaves" a society does not alter the fact that this society will still contain suicides. Suicide, like other immaterial social facts, exists independently of the will of an individual, cannot be eliminated, and is as influential—coercive—as physical laws like gravity.[34] Sociology's task therefore consists of discovering the qualities and characteristics of such social facts, which can be discovered through a quantitative or experimental approach (Durkheim extensively relied on statistics).[v]

Society, collective consciousness, and culture edit

 
Cover of the French edition of The Division of Labour in Society

Regarding the society itself, like social institutions in general, Durkheim saw it as a set of social facts.[citation needed] Even more than "what society is," Durkheim was interested in answering "how is a society created" and "what holds a society together." In The Division of Labour in Society, Durkheim attempts to answer the latter question.[37]

Collective consciousness edit

Durkheim assumes that humans are inherently egoistic, while "collective consciousness" (i.e. norms, beliefs, and values) forms the moral basis of the society, resulting in social integration.[38] Collective consciousness is therefore of key importance to the society; its requisite function without which the society cannot survive.[39] This consciousness produces the society and holds it together, while, at the same time, individuals produce collective consciousness through their interactions.[5] Through collective consciousness human beings become aware of one another as social beings, not just animals.[39]

The totality of beliefs and sentiments common to the average members of a society forms a determinate system with a life of its own. It can be termed the collective or common consciousness.[40]

In particular, the emotional part of the collective consciousness overrides our egoism: as we are emotionally bound to culture, we act socially because we recognize it is the responsible, moral way to act.[41] A key to forming society is social interaction, and Durkheim believes that human beings, when in a group, will inevitably act in such a way that a society is formed.[41][42]

Culture edit

Groups, when interacting, create their own culture and attach powerful emotions to it, thus making culture another key social fact.[43] Durkheim was one of the first scholars to consider the question of culture so intensely.[32] Durkheim was interested in cultural diversity, and how the existence of diversity nonetheless fails to destroy a society. To that, Durkheim answered that any apparent cultural diversity is overridden by a larger, common, and more generalized cultural system, and the law.[44]

In a socio-evolutionary approach, Durkheim described the evolution of societies from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity (one rising from mutual need).[32][37][45][46] As the societies become more complex, evolving from mechanical to organic solidarity, the division of labour is counteracting and replacing to collective consciousness.[37][47] In the simpler societies, people are connected to others due to personal ties and traditions; in the larger, modern society they are connected due to increased reliance on others with regard to them performing their specialized tasks needed for the modern, highly complex society to survive.[37] In mechanical solidarity, people are self-sufficient, there is little integration and thus there is the need for use of force and repression to keep society together.[45][citation needed] Also, in such societies, people have much fewer options in life.[48][clarification needed] In organic solidarity, people are much more integrated and interdependent and specialization and cooperation is extensive.[45][citation needed] Progress from mechanical to organic solidarity is based first on population growth and increasing population density, second on increasing "morality density" (development of more complex social interactions) and thirdly, on the increasing specialization in workplace.[45] One of the ways mechanical and organic societies differ is the function of law: in mechanical society the law is focused on its punitive aspect, and aims to reinforce the cohesion of the community, often by making the punishment public and extreme; whereas in the organic society the law focuses on repairing the damage done and is more focused on individuals than the community.[49]

One of the main features of the modern, organic society is the importance, sacredness even, given to the concept—social fact—of the individual.[50] The individual, rather than the collective, becomes the focus of rights and responsibilities, the center of public and private rituals holding the society together—a function once performed by the religion.[50] To stress the importance of this concept, Durkheim talked of the "cult of the individual":[51]

Thus very far from there being the antagonism between the individual and society which is often claimed, moral individualism, the cult of the individual, is in fact the product of society itself. It is society that instituted it and made of man the god whose servant it is.

Durkheim saw the population density and growth as key factors in the evolution of the societies and advent of modernity.[52] As the number of people in a given area increase, so does the number of interactions, and the society becomes more complex.[46] Growing competition between the more numerous people also leads to further division of labour.[46] In time, the importance of the state, the law and the individual increases, while that of the religion and moral solidarity decreases.[53]

In another example of evolution of culture, Durkheim pointed to fashion, although in this case he noted a more cyclical phenomenon.[54] According to Durkheim, fashion serves to differentiate between lower classes and upper classes, but because lower classes want to look like the upper classes, they will eventually adapt the upper class fashion, depreciating it, and forcing the upper class to adopt a new fashion.[54]

Social pathology and crime edit

As the society, Durkheim noted there are several possible pathologies that could lead to a breakdown of social integration and disintegration of the society: the two most important ones are anomie and forced division of labour; lesser ones include the lack of coordination and suicide.[55] To Durkheim, anomie refers to a lack of social norms; where too rapid of population growth reduces the amount of interaction between various groups, which in turn leads to a breakdown of understanding (i.e. norms, values, etc.).[56] Forced division of labour, on the other hand, refers to a situation in which those who hold power, driven by their desire for profit (greed), results in people doing work that they are unsuited for.[57] Such people are unhappy, and their desire to change the system can destabilize the society.[57]

Durkheim's views on crime were a departure from conventional notions. He believed that crime is "bound up with the fundamental conditions of all social life" and serves a social function.[30]: 101  He states that crime implies "not only that the way remains open to necessary changes but that in certain cases it directly prepares these changes."[30]: 101  Examining the trial of Socrates, he argues that "his crime, namely, the independence of his thought, rendered a service not only to humanity but to his country" as "it served to prepare a new morality and faith that the Athenians needed."[30]: 101  As such, his crime "was a useful prelude to reforms."[30]: 102  In this sense, he saw crime as being able to release certain social tensions and so have a cleansing or purging effect in society.[30]: 101 

The authority which the moral conscience enjoys must not be excessive; otherwise, no-one would dare to criticize it, and it would too easily congeal into an immutable form. To make progress, individual originality must be able to express itself…[even] the originality of the criminal…shall also be possible.

Deviance edit

Durkheim thought deviance to be an essential component of a functional society.[58] He believed that deviance had three possible effects on society:[58][59]

  1. Deviance challenges the perspective and thoughts of the general population, leading to social change by pointing out a flaw in society.
  2. Deviant acts may support existing social norms and beliefs by evoking the population to discipline the actors.
  3. Reactions to deviant activity could increase camaraderie and social support among the population affected by the activity.

Durkheim's thoughts on deviance contributed to Robert Merton's Strain Theory.[58]

Suicide edit

In Suicide (1897), Durkheim explores the differing suicide rates among Protestants and Catholics, arguing that stronger social control among Catholics results in lower suicide rates. According to Durkheim, Catholic society has normal levels of integration while Protestant society has low levels. Overall, Durkheim treated suicide as a social fact, explaining variations in its rate on a macro level, considering society-scale phenomena such as lack of connections between people (group attachment) and lack of regulations of behavior, rather than individuals' feelings and motivations.[37][60]

Durkheim believed there was more to suicide than extremely personal individual life circumstances such as loss of a job, divorce, or bankruptcy. Instead, Durkheim explained suicide as a symptom of collective social deviance, like alcoholism or homicide.[61]

He created a normative theory of suicide focusing on the conditions of group life. Proposing four different types of suicide, which include egoistic, altruistic, anomic, and fatalistic, Durkheim began his theory by plotting social regulation on the x-axis of his chart, and social integration on the y-axis:[61]

  • Egoistic suicide corresponds to a low level of social integration. When one is not well integrated into a social group it can lead to a feeling that they have not made a difference in anyone's lives.
  • Altruistic suicide corresponds to too much social integration. This occurs when a group dominates the life of an individual to a degree where they feel meaningless to society.
  • Anomic suicide occurs when one has an insufficient amount of social regulation. This stems from the sociological term anomie, meaning a sense of aimlessness or despair that arises from the inability to reasonably expect life to be predictable.
  • Fatalistic suicide results from too much social regulation. An example of this would be when one follows the same routine day after day. This leads to a belief that there is nothing good to look forward to. Durkheim suggested this was the most popular form of suicide for prisoners.

This study has been extensively discussed by later scholars and several major criticisms have emerged. First, Durkheim took most of his data from earlier researchers, notably Adolph Wagner and Henry Morselli,[62] who were much more careful in generalizing from their own data. Second, later researchers found that the Protestant–Catholic differences in suicide seemed to be limited to German-speaking Europe and thus may have always been the spurious reflection of other factors.[63] Durkheim's study of suicide has been criticized as an example of the logical error termed the ecological fallacy.[64][65] However, diverging views have contested whether Durkheim's work really contained an ecological fallacy.[66] More recent authors such as Berk (2006) have also questioned the micro–macro relations underlying Durkheim's work.[67] Some, such as Inkeles (1959),[68] Johnson (1965),[69] and Gibbs (1968),[70] have claimed that Durkheim's only intent was to explain suicide sociologically within a holistic perspective, emphasizing that "he intended his theory to explain variation among social environments in the incidence of suicide, not the suicides of particular individuals."[71]

Despite its limitations, Durkheim's work on suicide has influenced proponents of control theory, and is often mentioned as a classic sociological study. The book pioneered modern social research and served to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy.[9]: ch.1 

Religion edit

In The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912), Durkheim's first purpose was to identify the social origin and function of religion as he felt that religion was a source of camaraderie and solidarity.[37] His second purpose was to identify links between certain religions in different cultures, finding a common denominator. He wanted to understand the empirical, social aspect of religion that is common to all religions and goes beyond the concepts of spirituality and God.[72]

Durkheim defined religion as:[73]

"a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, i.e., things set apart and forbidden—beliefs and practices which unite in one single moral community called a Church, all those who adhere to them."

In this definition, Durkheim avoids references to supernatural or God.[74] Durkheim rejected earlier definitions by Tylor that religion was "belief in supernatural beings," finding that primitive societies such as the Australian aborigines (following the ethnologies of Spencer and Gillen, largely discredited later) did not divide reality into "natural" vs. "supernatural" realms, but rather into realms of the "sacred" and the "profane," which were not moral categories, since both could include what was good or evil.[75] Durkheim argues we are left with the following three concepts:[76]

Out of those three concepts, Durkheim focused on the sacred,[77][78] noting that it is at the very core of a religion:[79]: 322 

They are only collective forces hypostasized, that is to say, moral forces; they are made up of the ideas and sentiments awakened in us by the spectacle of society, and not of sensations coming from the physical world.[vi]

Durkheim saw religion as the most fundamental social institution of humankind, and one that gave rise to other social forms.[80] It was religion that gave humanity the strongest sense of collective consciousness.[81] Durkheim saw religion as a force that emerged in the early hunter and gatherer societies, as the emotions collective effervescence run high in the growing groups, forcing them to act in a new ways, and giving them a sense of some hidden force driving them.[47] Over time, as emotions became symbolized and interactions ritualized, religion became more organized, giving a rise to the division between the sacred and the profane.[47] However, Durkheim also believed that religion was becoming less important, as it was being gradually superseded by science and the cult of an individual.[50][82]

Thus there is something eternal in religion which is destined to survive all the particular symbols in which religious thought has successively enveloped itself.[79]: 427 

However, even if the religion was losing its importance for Durkheim, it still laid the foundation of modern society and the interactions that governed it.[81] And despite the advent of alternative forces, Durkheim argued that no replacement for the force of religion had yet been created. He expressed his doubt about modernity, seeing the modern times as "a period of transition and moral mediocrity."[53]

Durkheim also argued that our primary categories for understanding the world have their origins in religion.[54] It is religion, Durkheim writes, that gave rise to most if not all other social constructs, including the larger society.[81] Durkheim argued that categories are produced by the society, and thus are collective creations.[37] Thus as people create societies, they also create categories, but at the same time, they do so unconsciously, and the categories are prior to any individual's experience.[37] In this way Durkheim attempted to bridge the divide between seeing categories as constructed out of human experience and as logically prior to that experience.[37][83] Our understanding of the world is shaped by social facts; for example the notion of time is defined by being measured through a calendar, which in turn was created to allow us to keep track of our social gatherings and rituals; those in turn on their most basic level originated from religion.[81] In the end, even the most logical and rational pursuit of science can trace its origins to religion.[81] Durkheim states that, "Religion gave birth to all that is essential in the society."[81]

In his work, Durkheim focused on totemism, the religion of the Aboriginal Australians and Native Americans. Durkheim saw this religion as the most ancient religion, and focused on it as he believed its simplicity would ease the discussion of the essential elements of religion.[37][74] As such, he wrote:[79]: 220 

Now the totem is the flag of the clan. It is therefore natural that the impressions aroused by the clan in individual minds—impressions of dependence and of increased vitality—should fix themselves to the idea of the totem rather than that of the clan: for the clan is too complex a reality to be represented clearly in all its complex unity by such rudimentary intelligences.

Durkheim's work on religion was criticized on both empirical and theoretical grounds by specialists in the field. The most important critique came from Durkheim's contemporary, Arnold van Gennep, an expert on religion and ritual, and also on Australian belief systems. Van Gennep argued that Durkheim's views of primitive peoples and simple societies were "entirely erroneous". Van Gennep further argued that Durkheim demonstrated a lack of critical stance towards his sources, collected by traders and priests, naively accepting their veracity, and that Durkheim interpreted freely from dubious data. At the conceptual level, van Gennep pointed out Durkheim's tendency to press ethnography into a prefabricated theoretical scheme.[84]

Despite such critiques, Durkheim's work on religion has been widely praised for its theoretical insight and whose arguments and propositions, according to Robert Alun Jones, "have stimulated the interest and excitement of several generations of sociologists irrespective of theoretical 'school' or field of specialization."[85]

Sociology of knowledge edit

While Durkheim's work deals with a number of subjects, including suicide, the family, social structures, and social institutions, a large part of his work deals with the sociology of knowledge.

While publishing short articles on the subject earlier in his career,[vii] Durkheim's definitive statement concerning the sociology of knowledge comes in his 1912 magnum opus, The Elementary Forms of Religious Life. This book has as its goal not only the elucidation of the social origins and function of religion, but also the social origins and impact of society on language and logical thought. Durkheim worked largely out of a Kantian framework and sought to understand how the concepts and categories of logical thought could arise out of social life. He argued, for example, that the categories of space and time were not a priori. Rather, the category of space depends on a society's social grouping and geographical use of space, and a group's social rhythm that determines our understanding of time.[86] In this Durkheim sought to combine elements of rationalism and empiricism, arguing that certain aspects of logical thought common to all humans did exist, but that they were products of collective life (thus contradicting the tabula rasa empiricist understanding whereby categories are acquired by individual experience alone), and that they were not universal a prioris (as Kant argued) since the content of the categories differed from society to society.[viii]

Collective representations edit

Another key elements to Durkheim's theory of knowledge outlined in Elementary Forms is the concept of représentations collectives ("collective representations"). Représentations collectives are the symbols and images that come to represent the ideas, beliefs, and values elaborated by a collectivity and are not reducible to individual constituents. They can include words, slogans, ideas, or any number of material items that can serve as a symbol, such as a cross, a rock, a temple, a feather etc. As Durkheim elaborates, représentations collectives are created through intense social interaction and are products of collective activity. As such, these representations have the particular, and somewhat contradictory, aspect that they exist externally to the individual—since they are created and controlled not by the individual but by society as a whole—yet, simultaneously within each individual of the society, by virtue of that individual's participation within society.[87]

Arguably the most important "représentations collectives" is language, which according to Durkheim is a product of collective action. And because language is a collective action, language contains within it a history of accumulated knowledge and experience that no individual would be capable of creating on their own:[79]: 435 

If concepts were only general ideas, they would not enrich knowledge a great deal, for, as we have already pointed out, the general contains nothing more than the particular. But if before all else they are collective representations, they add to that which we can learn by our own personal experience all that wisdom and science which the group has accumulated in the course of centuries. Thinking by concepts, is not merely seeing reality on its most general side, but it is projecting a light upon the sensation which illuminates it, penetrates it and transforms it.

As such, language, as a social product, literally structures and shapes our experience of reality. This discursive approach to language and society was developed by later French philosophers, such as Michel Foucault.

Morality edit

How many times, indeed, it [crime] is only an anticipation of future morality - a step toward what will be!
— Émile Durkheim, Division of Labour in Society[88]

Durkheim defines morality as "a system of rules for conduct."[89] His analysis of morality is strongly marked by Immanuel Kant and his notion of duty. While Durkheim was influenced by Kant, he was highly critical of aspects of the latter's moral theory and developed his own positions.

Durkheim agrees with Kant that within morality, there is an element of obligation, "a moral authority which, by manifesting itself in certain precepts particularly important to it, confers upon [moral rules] an obligatory character."[51]: 38  Morality tells us how to act from a position of superiority. There exists a certain, pre-established moral norm to which we must conform. It is through this view that Durkheim makes a first critique of Kant in saying that moral duties originate in society, and are not to be found in some universal moral concept such as the categorical imperative. Durkheim also argues that morality is characterized not just by this obligation, but is also something that is desired by the individual. The individual believes that by adhering to morality, they are serving the common Good, and for this reason, the individual submits voluntarily to the moral commandment.[51]: 54 

However, in order to accomplish its aims, morality must be legitimate in the eyes of those to whom it speaks. As Durkheim argues, this moral authority is primarily to be located in religion, which is why in any religion one finds a code of morality. For Durkheim, it is only society that has the resources, the respect, and the power to cultivate within an individual both the obligatory and the desirous aspects of morality.[51]: 73 

Influence and legacy edit

Durkheim has had an important impact on the development of anthropology and sociology as disciplines. The establishment of sociology as an independent, recognized academic discipline, in particular, is among Durkheim's largest and most lasting legacies.[2] Within sociology, his work has significantly influenced structuralism, or structural functionalism.[2][32] Scholars inspired by Durkheim include Marcel Mauss, Maurice Halbwachs, Célestin Bouglé, Gustave Belot, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, Talcott Parsons, Robert K. Merton, Jean Piaget, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Ferdinand de Saussure, Michel Foucault, Clifford Geertz, Peter Berger, social reformer Patrick Hunout, and others.[2]

More recently, Durkheim has influenced sociologists such as Steven Lukes, Robert N. Bellah, and Pierre Bourdieu. His description of collective consciousness also deeply influenced Ziya Gökalp, the founder of Turkish sociology[90] who replaced Durkheim's concept of society with nation.[91] An ideologue who provided the intellectual justification for the Ottoman Empire's wars of aggression and massive demographic engineering—including the Armenian genocide—he could be considered to pervert Durkheim's ideas.[91][92] Randall Collins has developed a theory of what he calls interaction ritual chains, a synthesis of Durkheim's work on religion with that of Erving Goffman's micro-sociology. Goffman himself was also deeply influenced by Durkheim in his development of the interaction order.

Outside of sociology, Durkheim has influenced philosophers, including Henri Bergson and Emmanuel Levinas, and his ideas can be identified, inexplicitly, in the work of certain structuralist theorists of the 1960s, such as Alain Badiou, Louis Althusser, and Michel Foucault.[ix]

Durkheim contra Searle edit

Much of Durkheim's work remains unacknowledged in philosophy, despite its direct relevance. As proof, one can look to John Searle, whose book, The Construction of Social Reality, elaborates a theory of social facts and collective representations that Searle believed to be a landmark work that would bridge the gap between analytic and continental philosophy. Neil Gross, however, demonstrates how Searle's views on society are more or less a reconstitution of Durkheim's theories of social facts, social institutions, collective representations, and the like. Searle's ideas are thus open to the same criticisms as Durkheim's.[93] Searle responded by arguing that Durkheim's work was worse than he had originally believed, and, admitting that he had not read much of Durkheim's work: "Because Durkheim's account seemed so impoverished I did not read any further in his work."[94] Stephen Lukes, however, responded to Searle's reply to Gross, refuting, point by point, the allegations that Searle makes against Durkheim, essentially upholding the argument of Gross, that Searle's work bears great resemblance to that of Durkheim. Lukes attributes Searle's miscomprehension of Durkheim's work to the fact that Searle, quite simply, never read Durkheim.[95]

Gilbert pro Durkheim edit

Margaret Gilbert, a contemporary British philosopher of social phenomena, has offered a close, sympathetic reading of Durkheim's discussion of social facts in chapter 1 and the prefaces of The Rules of Sociological Method. In her 1989 book, On Social Facts—the title of which may represent an homage to Durkheim, alluding to his "faits sociaux"—Gilbert argues that some of his statements that may seem to be philosophically untenable are important and fruitful.[96]

Selected works edit

Published posthumously[98][99]

  • Education and Sociology (1922)
  • Sociology and Philosophy (1924)
  • Moral Education (1925)
  • Socialism (1928)
  • Pragmatism and Sociology (1955)

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "The first and most fundamental rule is: Consider social facts as things." (Durkheim 1895:14).
  2. ^ Collins (1975), p. 539: "Durkheim was the first to seriously use the comparative method correctly in the scientific sense."
  3. ^ Durkheim (1960/1892), p. 9: "Science cannot describe individuals, but only types. If human societies cannot be classified, they must remain inaccessible to scientific description."
  4. ^ Meštrović (1993), p. 37: "While Durkheim did not become a Rabbi, he may have transformed his father's philosophical and moral concerns into something new, his version of sociology."
  5. ^ Hassard (1995), p. 15: "Suicide…is indeed the paradigm case of Durkheim's positivism: it remains the exemplar of the sociological application of statistics."
  6. ^ Durkheim 1915, p. 322: "They are not homogeneous with the visible things among which we place them. They may well take from these things the outward and material forms in which they are represented, but they owe none of their efficacy to them. They are not united by external bonds to the different supports upon which they alight; they have no roots there; according to an expression we have already used and which serves best for characterizing them, they are added to them. So there are no objects which are predestined to receive them, to the exclusion of all others; even the most insignificant and vulgar may do so; accidental circumstances decide which are the chosen ones."
  7. ^ For example, the essay De quelques formes primitives de classification (1902), written with Marcel Mauss.
  8. ^ See Durkheim (1912) p. 14–17, 19–22.
  9. ^ Bourdieu & Passeron (1967), pp. 167–68: "For, speaking more generally, all the social sciences now live in the house of Durkheimism, unbeknownst to them, as it were, because they walked into it backwards."

Citations edit

  1. ^ Marchand, Jean Jose. 24 June 1974. "" [interview]. Archives du XXème siècle. Montigny sur Aube: l'Institut national de l'audiovisuel (INA). Archived from the original 17 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Calhoun (2002), p. 107
  3. ^ Kim, Sung Ho (2007). "Max Weber". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (24 August 2007 entry) http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/weber/ (Retrieved 17 February 2010)
  4. ^ a b c d e Allan (2005), p. 104
  5. ^ a b Durkheim, Émile. 1982 [1901]. "Preface to the Second Edition". Pp. 34–47 in The Rules of Sociological Method and Selected Texts on Sociology and its Method, edited by S. Lukes, translated by W. D. Halls. New York: The Free Press. ISBN 978-0-02-907940-9. p. 45.
  6. ^ Durkheim, Emile. 1993 [1893]. The Division of Labour in Society, translated by G. Simpson. New York: The Free Press. p. ix.
  7. ^ Jones, Robert Alun. 1986. "Emile Durkheim: His Life and Work (1858-1917)." Pp. 12–23 in Emile Durkheim: An Introduction to Four Major Works. Beverly Hills, CA: SAGE Publications. – via The Durkheim Pages, University of Chicago.
  8. ^ Tiryakian, Edward A. For Durkheim: Essays in Historical and Cultural Sociology. London: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 9780754671558. p. 21.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Poggi, Gianfranco. 2000. Durkheim. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-878087-8.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Calhoun (2002), p. 103
  11. ^ Bottomore & Nisbet (1978), p. 8
  12. ^ Lukes (1985), p. 64
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Calhoun (2002), p. 104
  14. ^ Jones & Spiro (1995), p. 149
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i Calhoun (2002), p. 105
  16. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 105
  17. ^ Pickering (2012), p. 11
  18. ^ Hayward (1960a)
  19. ^ Hayward (1960b)
  20. ^ Thompson (2002)
  21. ^ Durkheim, Émile. 1960 [1892]. "Montesquieu's Contribution to the Rise of Social Science." In Montesquieu and Rousseau: Forerunners of Sociology, translated by R. Manheim. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p. 9.
  22. ^ a b Morrison (2006), p. 152
  23. ^ Strenski (1997), pp. 1–2
  24. ^ Pickering (2001), p. 79
  25. ^ Allan (2005), p. 102
  26. ^ Allan (2005), p. 136
  27. ^ Durkheim, Emile. 2011 [1925]. Moral Education, translated by E. K. Wilson and H. Schnurer. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486424989. p. 102.
  28. ^ Popolo (2011), pp. 97–
  29. ^ Brinton & Nee (2001), pp. 11–
  30. ^ a b c d e f Durkheim, Émile. 2007 [1895]. "The Rules of Sociological Method." Pp. 95–102 in Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory: Text and Readings, edited by S. Appelrouth and L. D. Edles. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press. ISBN 978-0-7619-2793-8.
  31. ^ a b c Durkheim, Émile. 1938 [1895]. The Rules of Sociological Method, translated by S. A. Solovay and J. H. Mueller, edited by G. E. G. Catlin.
  32. ^ a b c d Allan (2005), p. 103
  33. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 105–06
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h Allan (2005), p. 106
  35. ^ a b c Durkheim, Émile. 1994 [1895]. "Social facts." Pp. 433–40 in Readings in the Philosophy of Social Science, edited by M. Martin and L. C. McIntyre. Boston: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-13296-1. p. 433–34.
  36. ^ Allan (2005), p. 107
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Calhoun (2002), p. 106
  38. ^ Kim, Sung Ho. 2007. "Max Weber." Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
  39. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 108
  40. ^ Kenneth Allan; Kenneth D. Allan (2 November 2005). Explorations in Classical Sociological Theory: Seeing the Social World. Pine Forge Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-4129-0572-5.
  41. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 109
  42. ^ Guha, Abhijit (December 2021). "An Open Letter to Emile Durkheim". Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India. 70 (2): 256–263. doi:10.1177/09767479211057745. S2CID 245132986.
  43. ^ Allan (2005), p. 110
  44. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 111, 127
  45. ^ a b c d Sztompka (2002), p. 500
  46. ^ a b c Allan (2005), p. 125
  47. ^ a b c Allan (2005), p. 137
  48. ^ Allan (2005), p. 123
  49. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 123–24
  50. ^ a b c Allan (2005), pp. 132–33
  51. ^ a b c d Durkheim, Émile. 1974 [1953]. Sociology and Philosophy, translated by D. F. Pocock, with introduction by J. G. Peristiany. Toronto: Free Press. ISBN 978-0-02-908580-6. LCCN 74--19680.
  52. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 125, 134
  53. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 134
  54. ^ a b c Allan (2005), p. 113
  55. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 128, 130
  56. ^ Allan (2005), p. 128, 129, 137
  57. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 129
  58. ^ a b c Introduction to Sociology (2 ed.). OpenStax. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-947172-11-1. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  59. ^ "7.2 Explaining Deviance." Sociology: Understanding and Changing the Social World. University of Minnesota Libraries (2016). ISBN 978-1-946135-24-7.
  60. ^ Allan (2005), p. 131
  61. ^ a b Mueller, Anna S.; Abrutyn, Seth; Pescosolido, Bernice; Diefendorf, Sarah (2021). "The Social Roots of Suicide: Theorizing How the External Social World Matters to Suicide and Suicide Prevention". Frontiers in Psychology. 12: 621569. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.621569. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 8044307. PMID 33868089.
  62. ^ Stark & Bainbridge (1996), p. 32
  63. ^ Pope & Danigelis (1981)
  64. ^ Freedman, David A. 2002. The Ecological Fallacy. Berkeley: Dept. of Statistics, University of California.
  65. ^ Selvin (1965)
  66. ^ van Poppel & Day (1996), p. 500
  67. ^ Berk (2006), pp. 78–79
  68. ^ Inkeles (1959)
  69. ^ Johnson (1965)
  70. ^ Gibbs & Martin (1958)
  71. ^ Berk (2006), p. 60
  72. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 112–15
  73. ^ Durkheim, Emile. 1964 [1915]. The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life, translated by J. W. Swain. London: George Allen & Unwin. – via Project Gutenberg (2012). p. 47.
  74. ^ a b Allan (2005), p. 115
  75. ^ {Pals|2006|pp=95-100, 112, 113}
  76. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 116, 118, 120, 137
  77. ^ Allan (2005), p. 116
  78. ^ Lukes (1985), p. 25
  79. ^ a b c d e Durkheim, Emile. 1964 [1915]. The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life, translated by J. W. Swain. London: George Allen & Unwin. – via Project Gutenberg (2012).
  80. ^ Allan (2005), pp. 112–13
  81. ^ a b c d e f Allan (2005), p. 114
  82. ^ Allan (2005), p. 112
  83. ^ McKinnon (2014)
  84. ^ Thomassen (2012)
  85. ^ Jones, Robert Alun. 1986. "The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912)." Pp. 115–55 in Emile Durkheim: An Introduction to Four Major Works. Beverly Hills, CA: SAGE Publications. – via The Durkheim Pages, University of Chicago. s. 7 "Critical Remarks".
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  90. ^ Nefes (2013)
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  94. ^ Searle (2006)
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  96. ^ Gilbert, Margaret. 1989. On Social Facts. chap. 4, s.2.
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  • Strenski, Ivan (1997). Durkheim and the Jews of France. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-77735-1.
  • Sztompka, Piotr (2002). Socjologia. Znak. ISBN 978-83-240-0218-4.
  • Thomassen, Bjørn (2012). "Émile Durkheim between Gabriel Tarde and Arnold van Gennep: founding moments of sociology and anthropology". Social Anthropology. 20 (3): 231–249. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8676.2012.00204.x.
  • Thompson, Kenneth (2002). Émile Durkheim (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-28530-8.
  • van Poppel, Frans; Day, Lincoln H. (1996). "AtTest of Durkheim's theory of suicide – without committing the "ecological fallacy"". American Sociological Review. 61 (3): 500–507. doi:10.2307/2096361. JSTOR 2096361.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Resources related to research : BEROSE - International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology. "Durkheim, Émile (1858-1917)", Paris, 2015. (ISSN 2648-2770)
  • Works by Emile Durkheim at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Émile Durkheim at Internet Archive
  • Works by Émile Durkheim at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Émile Durkheim at Curlie
  • The Durkheim pages (University of Chicago)
  • DD – Digital Durkheim
  • Bibliography on Durkheim (McMaster University) 20 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Annotated bibliography on Durkheim and Religion (University of North Carolina) 9 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Émile Durkheim". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Émile, durkheim, durkheim, redirects, here, town, germany, dürkheim, david, french, emil, dyʁkɛm, dyʁkajm, professionally, known, simply, april, 1858, november, 1917, french, sociologist, durkheim, formally, established, academic, discipline, sociology, common. Durkheim redirects here For the spa town in Germany see Bad Durkheim David Emile Durkheim French emil dyʁkɛm or dyʁkajm professionally known simply as Emile Durkheim 1 15 April 1858 15 November 1917 was a French sociologist Durkheim formally established the academic discipline of sociology and is commonly cited as one of the principal architects of modern social science along with both Karl Marx and Max Weber 2 3 Emile DurkheimBornDavid Emile Durkheim 1858 04 15 15 April 1858Epinal FranceDied15 November 1917 1917 11 15 aged 59 Paris FranceAlma materEcole Normale Superieure Friedrich Wilhelms UniversityUniversity of LeipzigUniversity of MarburgKnown forSocial factSacred profane dichotomyCollective consciousnessSocial integrationAnomieCollective effervescenceScientific careerFieldsPhilosophy sociology education anthropology religious studiesInstitutionsUniversity of ParisUniversity of BordeauxMuch of Durkheim s work was concerned with how societies can maintain their integrity and coherence in modernity an era in which traditional social and religious ties are much less universal and in which new social institutions have come into being Durkheim s conception of the scientific study of society laid the groundwork for modern sociology and he used such scientific tools as statistics surveys and historical observation in his analysis of suicides in Catholic and Protestant groups Durkheim s first major sociological work was De la division du travail social 1893 The Division of Labour in Society followed in 1895 by Les Regles de la methode sociologique The Rules of Sociological Method the same year in which Durkheim set up the first European department of sociology and became France s first professor of sociology 4 Durkheim s seminal monograph Le Suicide 1897 a study of suicide rates in Catholic and Protestant populations especially pioneered modern social research serving to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy The following year in 1898 he established the journal L Annee Sociologique Les formes elementaires de la vie religieuse 1912 The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life presented a theory of religion comparing the social and cultural lives of aboriginal and modern societies Durkheim was deeply preoccupied with the acceptance of sociology as a legitimate science He refined the positivism originally set forth by Auguste Comte promoting what could be considered as a form of epistemological realism as well as the use of the hypothetico deductive model in social science For Durkheim sociology was the science of institutions understanding the term in its broader meaning as the beliefs and modes of behaviour instituted by the collectivity 5 with its aim being to discover structural social facts As such Durkheim was a major proponent of structural functionalism a foundational perspective in both sociology and anthropology In his view social science should be purely holistic i in the sense that sociology should study phenomena attributed to society at large rather than being limited to the study of specific actions of individuals He remained a dominant force in French intellectual life until his death in 1917 presenting numerous lectures and published works on a variety of topics including the sociology of knowledge morality social stratification religion law education and deviance Some terms that he coined such as collective consciousness are now also used by laypeople 6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and heritage 1 2 Education 1 2 1 Academic career 1 3 Death 2 Methodology 3 Inspirations 3 1 Comte 3 2 Realism 3 3 Judaism 4 Durkheim and theory 4 1 Establishing sociology 4 2 Social facts 4 3 Society collective consciousness and culture 4 3 1 Collective consciousness 4 3 2 Culture 4 4 Social pathology and crime 4 4 1 Deviance 4 4 2 Suicide 4 5 Religion 4 6 Sociology of knowledge 4 6 1 Collective representations 4 7 Morality 5 Influence and legacy 5 1 Durkheim contra Searle 5 2 Gilbert pro Durkheim 6 Selected works 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editEarly life and heritage edit David Emile Durkheim was born 15 April 1858 in Epinal Lorraine France to Melanie Isidor and Moise Durkheim 7 8 coming into a long lineage of devout French Jews As his father grandfather and great grandfather had all been rabbis 9 1 young Durkheim began his education in a rabbinical school However at an early age he switched schools deciding not to follow in his family s footsteps 10 9 1 In fact Durkheim led a completely secular life whereby much of his work was dedicated to demonstrating that religious phenomena stemmed from social rather than divine factors Nevertheless Durkheim did not sever ties with his family nor with the Jewish community 9 1 In fact many of his most prominent collaborators and students were Jewish some even being blood relatives For instance Marcel Mauss a notable social anthropologist of the prewar era was his nephew 2 Education edit A precocious student Durkheim entered the Ecole Normale Superieure ENS in 1879 at his third attempt 10 9 2 The entering class that year was one of the most brilliant of the nineteenth century as many of his classmates such as Jean Jaures and Henri Bergson went on to become major figures in France s intellectual history as well At the ENS Durkheim studied under the direction of Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges a classicist with a social scientific outlook and wrote his Latin dissertation on Montesquieu 11 At the same time he read Auguste Comte and Herbert Spencer whereby Durkheim became interested in a scientific approach to society very early on in his career 10 This meant the first of many conflicts with the French academic system which had no social science curriculum at the time Durkheim found humanistic studies uninteresting turning his attention from psychology and philosophy to ethics and eventually sociology 10 He obtained his agregation in philosophy in 1882 though finishing next to last in his graduating class owing to serious illness the year before 12 The opportunity for Durkheim to receive a major academic appointment in Paris was inhibited by his approach to society From 1882 to 1887 he taught philosophy at several provincial schools 13 In 1885 he decided to leave for Germany where for two years he studied sociology at the universities of Marburg Berlin and Leipzig 13 As Durkheim indicated in several essays it was in Leipzig that he learned to appreciate the value of empiricism and its language of concrete complex things in sharp contrast to the more abstract clear and simple ideas of the Cartesian method 14 By 1886 as part of his doctoral dissertation he had completed the draft of his The Division of Labour in Society and was working towards establishing the new science of sociology 13 Academic career edit nbsp A collection of Durkheim s courses on the origins of socialism 1896 edited and published by his nephew Marcel Mauss in 1928Durkheim s period in Germany resulted in the publication of numerous articles on German social science and philosophy Durkheim was particularly impressed by the work of Wilhelm Wundt 13 Durkheim s articles gained recognition in France and he received a teaching appointment in the University of Bordeaux in 1887 where he was to teach the university s first social science course 13 His official title was Charge d un Cours de Science Sociale et de Pedagogie thus he taught both pedagogy and sociology the latter having never been taught in France before 4 9 3 The appointment of the social scientist to the mostly humanistic faculty was an important sign of changing times and the growing importance and recognition of the social sciences 13 From this position Durkheim helped reform the French school system introducing the study of social science in its curriculum However his controversial beliefs that religion and morality could be explained in terms purely of social interaction earned him many critics citation needed Also in 1887 Durkheim married Louise Dreyfus They had two children Marie and Andre 4 The 1890s were a period of remarkable creative output for Durkheim 13 In 1893 he published The Division of Labour in Society his doctoral dissertation and fundamental statement of the nature of human society and its development 9 x Durkheim s interest in social phenomena was spurred on by politics France s defeat in the Franco Prussian War led to the fall of the regime of Napoleon III which was then replaced by the Third Republic This in turn resulted in a backlash against the new secular and republican rule as many people considered a vigorously nationalistic approach necessary to rejuvenate France s fading power Durkheim a Jew and a staunch supporter of the Third Republic with a sympathy towards socialism was thus in the political minority a situation that galvanized him politically The Dreyfus affair of 1894 only strengthened his activist stance 15 In 1895 he published The Rules of Sociological Method 13 a manifesto stating what sociology is and how it ought to be done and founded the first European department of sociology at the University of Bordeaux In 1898 he founded L Annee Sociologique the first French social science journal 13 Its aim was to publish and publicize the work of what was by then a growing number of students and collaborators this is also the name used to refer to the group of students who developed his sociological program In 1897 he published Suicide a case study that provided an example of what a sociological monograph might look like Durkheim was one of the pioneers of the use of quantitative methods in criminology which he used in his study of suicide citation needed By 1902 Durkheim had finally achieved his goal of attaining a prominent position in Paris when he became the chair of education at the Sorbonne Durkheim had aimed for the position earlier but the Parisian faculty took longer to accept what some called sociological imperialism and admit social science to their curriculum 15 He became a full professor specifically Professor of the Science of Education there in 1906 and in 1913 he was named chair in Education and Sociology 4 15 Because French universities are technically institutions for training secondary school teachers this position gave Durkheim considerable influence his lectures were the only ones that were mandatory for the entire student body Durkheim had much influence over the new generation of teachers around that time he also served as an advisor to the Ministry of Education 4 In 1912 he published his last major work The Elementary Forms of The Religious Life Death edit nbsp Grave of Emile Durkheim the founder of sociology in Montparnasse Cemetery Paris France The outbreak of World War I was to have a tragic effect on Durkheim s life His leftism was always patriotic rather than internationalist in that he sought a secular rational form of French life However the onset of the war and the inevitable nationalist propaganda that followed made it difficult to sustain this already nuanced position While Durkheim actively worked to support his country in the war his reluctance to give in to simplistic nationalist fervor combined with his Jewish background made him a natural target of the now ascendant French Right Even more seriously the generations of students that Durkheim had trained were now being drafted to serve in the army many of them perishing in the trenches citation needed Finally Durkheim s own son Andre died on the war front in December 1915 a loss from which Durkheim never recovered 15 16 Emotionally devastated Durkheim collapsed of a stroke in Paris two years later on 15 November 1917 16 He was buried at the Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris 17 Methodology edit nbsp Cover of the French edition of The Rules of Sociological Method 1919 In The Rules of Sociological Method 1895 Durkheim expressed his will to establish a method that would guarantee sociology s truly scientific character One of the questions raised concerns the objectivity of the sociologist how may one study an object that from the very beginning conditions and relates to the observer According to Durkheim observation must be as impartial and impersonal as possible even though a perfectly objective observation in this sense may never be attained A social fact must always be studied according to its relation with other social facts never according to the individual who studies it Sociology should therefore privilege comparison rather than the study of singular independent facts ii Durkheim sought to create one of the first rigorous scientific approaches to social phenomena Along with Herbert Spencer he was one of the first people to explain the existence and quality of different parts of a society by reference to what function they served in maintaining the quotidian i e by how they make society work He also agreed with Spencer s organic analogy comparing society to a living organism 13 Thus his work is sometimes seen as a precursor to functionalism 10 18 19 20 Durkheim also insisted that society was more than the sum of its parts iii 21 Unlike his contemporaries Ferdinand Tonnies and Max Weber he did not focus on what motivates the actions of individuals an approach associated with methodological individualism but rather on the study of social facts Inspirations editDuring his university studies at the ENS Durkheim was influenced by two neo Kantian scholars Charles Bernard Renouvier and Emile Boutroux 10 The principles Durkheim absorbed from them included rationalism scientific study of morality anti utilitarianism and secular education 13 His methodology was influenced by Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges a supporter of the scientific method 13 Comte edit A fundamental influence on Durkheim s thought was the sociological positivism of Auguste Comte who effectively sought to extend and apply the scientific method found in the natural sciences to the social sciences 13 According to Comte a true social science should stress empirical facts as well as induce general scientific laws from the relationship among these facts There were many points on which Durkheim agreed with the positivist thesis First he accepted that the study of society was to be founded on an examination of facts Second like Comte he acknowledged that the only valid guide to objective knowledge was the scientific method Third he agreed with Comte that the social sciences could become scientific only when they were stripped of their metaphysical abstractions 13 Realism edit A second influence on Durkheim s view of society beyond Comte s positivism was the epistemological outlook called social realism Although he never explicitly espoused it Durkheim adopted a realist perspective in order to demonstrate the existence of social realities outside the individual and to show that these realities existed in the form of the objective relations of society 22 As an epistemology of science realism can be defined as a perspective that takes as its central point of departure the view that external social realities exist in the outer world and that these realities are independent of the individual s perception of them This view opposes other predominant philosophical perspectives such as empiricism and positivism Empiricists like David Hume had argued that all realities in the outside world are products of human sense perception thus all realities are merely perceived they do not exist independently of our perceptions and have no causal power in themselves 22 Comte s positivism went a step further by claiming that scientific laws could be deduced from empirical observations Going beyond this Durkheim claimed that sociology would not only discover apparent laws but would be able to discover the inherent nature of society Judaism edit Scholars also debate the exact influence of Jewish thought on Durkheim s work The answer remains uncertain some scholars have argued that Durkheim s thought is a form of secularized Jewish thought iv 23 while others argue that proving the existence of a direct influence of Jewish thought on Durkheim s achievements is difficult or impossible 24 Durkheim and theory editThroughout his career Durkheim was concerned primarily with three goals First to establish sociology as a new academic discipline 15 Second to analyse how societies could maintain their integrity and coherence in the modern era when things such as shared religious and ethnic background could no longer be assumed To that end he wrote much about the effect of laws religion education and similar forces on society and social integration 15 25 Lastly Durkheim was concerned with the practical implications of scientific knowledge 15 The importance of social integration is expressed throughout Durkheim s work 26 27 For if society lacks the unity that derives from the fact that the relationships between its parts are exactly regulated that unity resulting from the harmonious articulation of its various functions assured by effective discipline and if in addition society lacks the unity based upon the commitment of men s wills to a common objective then it is no more than a pile of sand that the least jolt or the slightest puff will suffice to scatter Moral Education 1925 Establishing sociology edit Durkheim authored some of the most programmatic statements on what sociology is and how it should be practiced 10 His concern was to establish sociology as a science 28 Arguing for a place for sociology among other sciences he wrote sociology is then not an auxiliary of any other science it is itself a distinct and autonomous science 29 To give sociology a place in the academic world and to ensure that it is a legitimate science it must have an object that is clear and distinct from philosophy or psychology and its own methodology 15 He argued that there is in every society a certain group of phenomena which may be differentiated from those studied by the other natural sciences 30 95 In the Tarde Durkeim debate of 1903 the anthropological view of Gabriel Tarde was ridiculed and hastily dismissed citation needed A fundamental aim of sociology is to discover structural social facts 15 31 13 The establishment of sociology as an independent recognized academic discipline is among Durkheim s largest and most lasting legacies 2 Within sociology his work has significantly influenced structuralism or structural functionalism 2 32 Social facts edit Main article Social fact A social fact is every way of acting fixed or not capable of exercising on the individual an external constraint or again every way of acting which is general throughout a given society while at the same time existing in its own right independent of its individual manifestations The Rules of Sociological Method 31 Durkheim s work revolved around the study of social facts a term he coined to describe phenomena that have an existence in and of themselves are not bound to the actions of individuals but have a coercive influence upon them 33 Durkheim argued that social facts have sui generis an independent existence greater and more objective than the actions of the individuals that compose society 34 Only such social facts can explain the observed social phenomena 10 Being exterior to the individual person social facts may thus also exercise coercive power on the various people composing society as it can sometimes be observed in the case of formal laws and regulations but also in situations implying the presence of informal rules such as religious rituals or family norms 31 35 Unlike the facts studied in natural sciences a social fact thus refers to a specific category of phenomena the determining cause of a social fact must be sought among the antecedent social facts and not among the states of the individual consciousness citation needed Such facts are endowed with a power of coercion by reason of which they may control individual behaviors 35 According to Durkheim these phenomena cannot be reduced to biological or psychological grounds 35 Social facts can be material i e physical objects or immaterial i e meanings sentiments etc 34 Though the latter cannot be seen or touched they are external and coercive thus becoming real and gaining facticity 34 Physical objects too can represent both material and immaterial social facts For example a flag is a physical social fact that is often ingrained with various immaterial social facts e g its meaning and importance 34 Many social facts however have no material form 34 Even the most individualistic or subjective phenomena such as love freedom or suicide were regarded by Durkheim as objective social facts 34 Individuals composing society do not directly cause suicide suicide as a social fact exists independently in society and is caused by other social facts such as rules governing behavior and group attachment whether an individual likes it or not 34 36 Whether a person leaves a society does not alter the fact that this society will still contain suicides Suicide like other immaterial social facts exists independently of the will of an individual cannot be eliminated and is as influential coercive as physical laws like gravity 34 Sociology s task therefore consists of discovering the qualities and characteristics of such social facts which can be discovered through a quantitative or experimental approach Durkheim extensively relied on statistics v Society collective consciousness and culture edit nbsp Cover of the French edition of The Division of Labour in SocietyRegarding the society itself like social institutions in general Durkheim saw it as a set of social facts citation needed Even more than what society is Durkheim was interested in answering how is a society created and what holds a society together In The Division of Labour in Society Durkheim attempts to answer the latter question 37 Collective consciousness editDurkheim assumes that humans are inherently egoistic while collective consciousness i e norms beliefs and values forms the moral basis of the society resulting in social integration 38 Collective consciousness is therefore of key importance to the society its requisite function without which the society cannot survive 39 This consciousness produces the society and holds it together while at the same time individuals produce collective consciousness through their interactions 5 Through collective consciousness human beings become aware of one another as social beings not just animals 39 The totality of beliefs and sentiments common to the average members of a society forms a determinate system with a life of its own It can be termed the collective or common consciousness 40 In particular the emotional part of the collective consciousness overrides our egoism as we are emotionally bound to culture we act socially because we recognize it is the responsible moral way to act 41 A key to forming society is social interaction and Durkheim believes that human beings when in a group will inevitably act in such a way that a society is formed 41 42 Culture edit Groups when interacting create their own culture and attach powerful emotions to it thus making culture another key social fact 43 Durkheim was one of the first scholars to consider the question of culture so intensely 32 Durkheim was interested in cultural diversity and how the existence of diversity nonetheless fails to destroy a society To that Durkheim answered that any apparent cultural diversity is overridden by a larger common and more generalized cultural system and the law 44 In a socio evolutionary approach Durkheim described the evolution of societies from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity one rising from mutual need 32 37 45 46 As the societies become more complex evolving from mechanical to organic solidarity the division of labour is counteracting and replacing to collective consciousness 37 47 In the simpler societies people are connected to others due to personal ties and traditions in the larger modern society they are connected due to increased reliance on others with regard to them performing their specialized tasks needed for the modern highly complex society to survive 37 In mechanical solidarity people are self sufficient there is little integration and thus there is the need for use of force and repression to keep society together 45 citation needed Also in such societies people have much fewer options in life 48 clarification needed In organic solidarity people are much more integrated and interdependent and specialization and cooperation is extensive 45 citation needed Progress from mechanical to organic solidarity is based first on population growth and increasing population density second on increasing morality density development of more complex social interactions and thirdly on the increasing specialization in workplace 45 One of the ways mechanical and organic societies differ is the function of law in mechanical society the law is focused on its punitive aspect and aims to reinforce the cohesion of the community often by making the punishment public and extreme whereas in the organic society the law focuses on repairing the damage done and is more focused on individuals than the community 49 One of the main features of the modern organic society is the importance sacredness even given to the concept social fact of the individual 50 The individual rather than the collective becomes the focus of rights and responsibilities the center of public and private rituals holding the society together a function once performed by the religion 50 To stress the importance of this concept Durkheim talked of the cult of the individual 51 Thus very far from there being the antagonism between the individual and society which is often claimed moral individualism the cult of the individual is in fact the product of society itself It is society that instituted it and made of man the god whose servant it is Durkheim saw the population density and growth as key factors in the evolution of the societies and advent of modernity 52 As the number of people in a given area increase so does the number of interactions and the society becomes more complex 46 Growing competition between the more numerous people also leads to further division of labour 46 In time the importance of the state the law and the individual increases while that of the religion and moral solidarity decreases 53 In another example of evolution of culture Durkheim pointed to fashion although in this case he noted a more cyclical phenomenon 54 According to Durkheim fashion serves to differentiate between lower classes and upper classes but because lower classes want to look like the upper classes they will eventually adapt the upper class fashion depreciating it and forcing the upper class to adopt a new fashion 54 Social pathology and crime edit As the society Durkheim noted there are several possible pathologies that could lead to a breakdown of social integration and disintegration of the society the two most important ones are anomie and forced division of labour lesser ones include the lack of coordination and suicide 55 To Durkheim anomie refers to a lack of social norms where too rapid of population growth reduces the amount of interaction between various groups which in turn leads to a breakdown of understanding i e norms values etc 56 Forced division of labour on the other hand refers to a situation in which those who hold power driven by their desire for profit greed results in people doing work that they are unsuited for 57 Such people are unhappy and their desire to change the system can destabilize the society 57 Durkheim s views on crime were a departure from conventional notions He believed that crime is bound up with the fundamental conditions of all social life and serves a social function 30 101 He states that crime implies not only that the way remains open to necessary changes but that in certain cases it directly prepares these changes 30 101 Examining the trial of Socrates he argues that his crime namely the independence of his thought rendered a service not only to humanity but to his country as it served to prepare a new morality and faith that the Athenians needed 30 101 As such his crime was a useful prelude to reforms 30 102 In this sense he saw crime as being able to release certain social tensions and so have a cleansing or purging effect in society 30 101 The authority which the moral conscience enjoys must not be excessive otherwise no one would dare to criticize it and it would too easily congeal into an immutable form To make progress individual originality must be able to express itself even the originality of the criminal shall also be possible Deviance edit Durkheim thought deviance to be an essential component of a functional society 58 He believed that deviance had three possible effects on society 58 59 Deviance challenges the perspective and thoughts of the general population leading to social change by pointing out a flaw in society Deviant acts may support existing social norms and beliefs by evoking the population to discipline the actors Reactions to deviant activity could increase camaraderie and social support among the population affected by the activity Durkheim s thoughts on deviance contributed to Robert Merton s Strain Theory 58 Suicide edit Main article Suicide Durkheim book In Suicide 1897 Durkheim explores the differing suicide rates among Protestants and Catholics arguing that stronger social control among Catholics results in lower suicide rates According to Durkheim Catholic society has normal levels of integration while Protestant society has low levels Overall Durkheim treated suicide as a social fact explaining variations in its rate on a macro level considering society scale phenomena such as lack of connections between people group attachment and lack of regulations of behavior rather than individuals feelings and motivations 37 60 Durkheim believed there was more to suicide than extremely personal individual life circumstances such as loss of a job divorce or bankruptcy Instead Durkheim explained suicide as a symptom of collective social deviance like alcoholism or homicide 61 He created a normative theory of suicide focusing on the conditions of group life Proposing four different types of suicide which include egoistic altruistic anomic and fatalistic Durkheim began his theory by plotting social regulation on the x axis of his chart and social integration on the y axis 61 Egoistic suicide corresponds to a low level of social integration When one is not well integrated into a social group it can lead to a feeling that they have not made a difference in anyone s lives Altruistic suicide corresponds to too much social integration This occurs when a group dominates the life of an individual to a degree where they feel meaningless to society Anomic suicide occurs when one has an insufficient amount of social regulation This stems from the sociological term anomie meaning a sense of aimlessness or despair that arises from the inability to reasonably expect life to be predictable Fatalistic suicide results from too much social regulation An example of this would be when one follows the same routine day after day This leads to a belief that there is nothing good to look forward to Durkheim suggested this was the most popular form of suicide for prisoners This study has been extensively discussed by later scholars and several major criticisms have emerged First Durkheim took most of his data from earlier researchers notably Adolph Wagner and Henry Morselli 62 who were much more careful in generalizing from their own data Second later researchers found that the Protestant Catholic differences in suicide seemed to be limited to German speaking Europe and thus may have always been the spurious reflection of other factors 63 Durkheim s study of suicide has been criticized as an example of the logical error termed the ecological fallacy 64 65 However diverging views have contested whether Durkheim s work really contained an ecological fallacy 66 More recent authors such as Berk 2006 have also questioned the micro macro relations underlying Durkheim s work 67 Some such as Inkeles 1959 68 Johnson 1965 69 and Gibbs 1968 70 have claimed that Durkheim s only intent was to explain suicide sociologically within a holistic perspective emphasizing that he intended his theory to explain variation among social environments in the incidence of suicide not the suicides of particular individuals 71 Despite its limitations Durkheim s work on suicide has influenced proponents of control theory and is often mentioned as a classic sociological study The book pioneered modern social research and served to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy 9 ch 1 Religion edit In The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life 1912 Durkheim s first purpose was to identify the social origin and function of religion as he felt that religion was a source of camaraderie and solidarity 37 His second purpose was to identify links between certain religions in different cultures finding a common denominator He wanted to understand the empirical social aspect of religion that is common to all religions and goes beyond the concepts of spirituality and God 72 Durkheim defined religion as 73 a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things i e things set apart and forbidden beliefs and practices which unite in one single moral community called a Church all those who adhere to them In this definition Durkheim avoids references to supernatural or God 74 Durkheim rejected earlier definitions by Tylor that religion was belief in supernatural beings finding that primitive societies such as the Australian aborigines following the ethnologies of Spencer and Gillen largely discredited later did not divide reality into natural vs supernatural realms but rather into realms of the sacred and the profane which were not moral categories since both could include what was good or evil 75 Durkheim argues we are left with the following three concepts 76 The sacred ideas and sentiments kindled by the spectacle of society and which inspire awe spiritual devotion or respect The beliefs amp practices creating an emotional state of collective effervescence investing symbols with sacred importance The moral community a group of people sharing a common moral philosophy Out of those three concepts Durkheim focused on the sacred 77 78 noting that it is at the very core of a religion 79 322 They are only collective forces hypostasized that is to say moral forces they are made up of the ideas and sentiments awakened in us by the spectacle of society and not of sensations coming from the physical world vi Durkheim saw religion as the most fundamental social institution of humankind and one that gave rise to other social forms 80 It was religion that gave humanity the strongest sense of collective consciousness 81 Durkheim saw religion as a force that emerged in the early hunter and gatherer societies as the emotions collective effervescence run high in the growing groups forcing them to act in a new ways and giving them a sense of some hidden force driving them 47 Over time as emotions became symbolized and interactions ritualized religion became more organized giving a rise to the division between the sacred and the profane 47 However Durkheim also believed that religion was becoming less important as it was being gradually superseded by science and the cult of an individual 50 82 Thus there is something eternal in religion which is destined to survive all the particular symbols in which religious thought has successively enveloped itself 79 427 However even if the religion was losing its importance for Durkheim it still laid the foundation of modern society and the interactions that governed it 81 And despite the advent of alternative forces Durkheim argued that no replacement for the force of religion had yet been created He expressed his doubt about modernity seeing the modern times as a period of transition and moral mediocrity 53 Durkheim also argued that our primary categories for understanding the world have their origins in religion 54 It is religion Durkheim writes that gave rise to most if not all other social constructs including the larger society 81 Durkheim argued that categories are produced by the society and thus are collective creations 37 Thus as people create societies they also create categories but at the same time they do so unconsciously and the categories are prior to any individual s experience 37 In this way Durkheim attempted to bridge the divide between seeing categories as constructed out of human experience and as logically prior to that experience 37 83 Our understanding of the world is shaped by social facts for example the notion of time is defined by being measured through a calendar which in turn was created to allow us to keep track of our social gatherings and rituals those in turn on their most basic level originated from religion 81 In the end even the most logical and rational pursuit of science can trace its origins to religion 81 Durkheim states that Religion gave birth to all that is essential in the society 81 In his work Durkheim focused on totemism the religion of the Aboriginal Australians and Native Americans Durkheim saw this religion as the most ancient religion and focused on it as he believed its simplicity would ease the discussion of the essential elements of religion 37 74 As such he wrote 79 220 Now the totem is the flag of the clan It is therefore natural that the impressions aroused by the clan in individual minds impressions of dependence and of increased vitality should fix themselves to the idea of the totem rather than that of the clan for the clan is too complex a reality to be represented clearly in all its complex unity by such rudimentary intelligences Durkheim s work on religion was criticized on both empirical and theoretical grounds by specialists in the field The most important critique came from Durkheim s contemporary Arnold van Gennep an expert on religion and ritual and also on Australian belief systems Van Gennep argued that Durkheim s views of primitive peoples and simple societies were entirely erroneous Van Gennep further argued that Durkheim demonstrated a lack of critical stance towards his sources collected by traders and priests naively accepting their veracity and that Durkheim interpreted freely from dubious data At the conceptual level van Gennep pointed out Durkheim s tendency to press ethnography into a prefabricated theoretical scheme 84 Despite such critiques Durkheim s work on religion has been widely praised for its theoretical insight and whose arguments and propositions according to Robert Alun Jones have stimulated the interest and excitement of several generations of sociologists irrespective of theoretical school or field of specialization 85 Sociology of knowledge edit While Durkheim s work deals with a number of subjects including suicide the family social structures and social institutions a large part of his work deals with the sociology of knowledge While publishing short articles on the subject earlier in his career vii Durkheim s definitive statement concerning the sociology of knowledge comes in his 1912 magnum opus The Elementary Forms of Religious Life This book has as its goal not only the elucidation of the social origins and function of religion but also the social origins and impact of society on language and logical thought Durkheim worked largely out of a Kantian framework and sought to understand how the concepts and categories of logical thought could arise out of social life He argued for example that the categories of space and time were not a priori Rather the category of space depends on a society s social grouping and geographical use of space and a group s social rhythm that determines our understanding of time 86 In this Durkheim sought to combine elements of rationalism and empiricism arguing that certain aspects of logical thought common to all humans did exist but that they were products of collective life thus contradicting the tabula rasa empiricist understanding whereby categories are acquired by individual experience alone and that they were not universal a prioris as Kant argued since the content of the categories differed from society to society viii Collective representations edit Another key elements to Durkheim s theory of knowledge outlined in Elementary Forms is the concept of representations collectives collective representations Representations collectives are the symbols and images that come to represent the ideas beliefs and values elaborated by a collectivity and are not reducible to individual constituents They can include words slogans ideas or any number of material items that can serve as a symbol such as a cross a rock a temple a feather etc As Durkheim elaborates representations collectives are created through intense social interaction and are products of collective activity As such these representations have the particular and somewhat contradictory aspect that they exist externally to the individual since they are created and controlled not by the individual but by society as a whole yet simultaneously within each individual of the society by virtue of that individual s participation within society 87 Arguably the most important representations collectives is language which according to Durkheim is a product of collective action And because language is a collective action language contains within it a history of accumulated knowledge and experience that no individual would be capable of creating on their own 79 435 If concepts were only general ideas they would not enrich knowledge a great deal for as we have already pointed out the general contains nothing more than the particular But if before all else they are collective representations they add to that which we can learn by our own personal experience all that wisdom and science which the group has accumulated in the course of centuries Thinking by concepts is not merely seeing reality on its most general side but it is projecting a light upon the sensation which illuminates it penetrates it and transforms it As such language as a social product literally structures and shapes our experience of reality This discursive approach to language and society was developed by later French philosophers such as Michel Foucault Morality edit How many times indeed it crime is only an anticipation of future morality a step toward what will be Emile Durkheim Division of Labour in Society 88 Durkheim defines morality as a system of rules for conduct 89 His analysis of morality is strongly marked by Immanuel Kant and his notion of duty While Durkheim was influenced by Kant he was highly critical of aspects of the latter s moral theory and developed his own positions Durkheim agrees with Kant that within morality there is an element of obligation a moral authority which by manifesting itself in certain precepts particularly important to it confers upon moral rules an obligatory character 51 38 Morality tells us how to act from a position of superiority There exists a certain pre established moral norm to which we must conform It is through this view that Durkheim makes a first critique of Kant in saying that moral duties originate in society and are not to be found in some universal moral concept such as the categorical imperative Durkheim also argues that morality is characterized not just by this obligation but is also something that is desired by the individual The individual believes that by adhering to morality they are serving the common Good and for this reason the individual submits voluntarily to the moral commandment 51 54 However in order to accomplish its aims morality must be legitimate in the eyes of those to whom it speaks As Durkheim argues this moral authority is primarily to be located in religion which is why in any religion one finds a code of morality For Durkheim it is only society that has the resources the respect and the power to cultivate within an individual both the obligatory and the desirous aspects of morality 51 73 Influence and legacy editDurkheim has had an important impact on the development of anthropology and sociology as disciplines The establishment of sociology as an independent recognized academic discipline in particular is among Durkheim s largest and most lasting legacies 2 Within sociology his work has significantly influenced structuralism or structural functionalism 2 32 Scholars inspired by Durkheim include Marcel Mauss Maurice Halbwachs Celestin Bougle Gustave Belot Alfred Radcliffe Brown Talcott Parsons Robert K Merton Jean Piaget Claude Levi Strauss Ferdinand de Saussure Michel Foucault Clifford Geertz Peter Berger social reformer Patrick Hunout and others 2 More recently Durkheim has influenced sociologists such as Steven Lukes Robert N Bellah and Pierre Bourdieu His description of collective consciousness also deeply influenced Ziya Gokalp the founder of Turkish sociology 90 who replaced Durkheim s concept of society with nation 91 An ideologue who provided the intellectual justification for the Ottoman Empire s wars of aggression and massive demographic engineering including the Armenian genocide he could be considered to pervert Durkheim s ideas 91 92 Randall Collins has developed a theory of what he calls interaction ritual chains a synthesis of Durkheim s work on religion with that of Erving Goffman s micro sociology Goffman himself was also deeply influenced by Durkheim in his development of the interaction order Outside of sociology Durkheim has influenced philosophers including Henri Bergson and Emmanuel Levinas and his ideas can be identified inexplicitly in the work of certain structuralist theorists of the 1960s such as Alain Badiou Louis Althusser and Michel Foucault ix Durkheim contra Searle edit Much of Durkheim s work remains unacknowledged in philosophy despite its direct relevance As proof one can look to John Searle whose book The Construction of Social Reality elaborates a theory of social facts and collective representations that Searle believed to be a landmark work that would bridge the gap between analytic and continental philosophy Neil Gross however demonstrates how Searle s views on society are more or less a reconstitution of Durkheim s theories of social facts social institutions collective representations and the like Searle s ideas are thus open to the same criticisms as Durkheim s 93 Searle responded by arguing that Durkheim s work was worse than he had originally believed and admitting that he had not read much of Durkheim s work Because Durkheim s account seemed so impoverished I did not read any further in his work 94 Stephen Lukes however responded to Searle s reply to Gross refuting point by point the allegations that Searle makes against Durkheim essentially upholding the argument of Gross that Searle s work bears great resemblance to that of Durkheim Lukes attributes Searle s miscomprehension of Durkheim s work to the fact that Searle quite simply never read Durkheim 95 Gilbert pro Durkheim edit Margaret Gilbert a contemporary British philosopher of social phenomena has offered a close sympathetic reading of Durkheim s discussion of social facts in chapter 1 and the prefaces of The Rules of Sociological Method In her 1989 book On Social Facts the title of which may represent an homage to Durkheim alluding to his faits sociaux Gilbert argues that some of his statements that may seem to be philosophically untenable are important and fruitful 96 Selected works edit Montesquieu s contributions to the formation of social science 1892 The Division of Labour in Society 1893 The Rules of Sociological Method 1895 Suicide 1897 The Prohibition of Incest and its Origins 1897 in L Annee Sociologique 1 1 70 Sociology and its Scientific Domain 1900 translation of an Italian text entitled La sociologia e il suo dominio scientifico Primitive Classification 1903 in collaboration with Marcel Mauss The Elementary Forms of Religious Life 1912 79 97 Who Wanted War 1914 in collaboration with Ernest Denis Germany Above All 1915 Published posthumously 98 99 Education and Sociology 1922 Sociology and Philosophy 1924 Moral Education 1925 Socialism 1928 Pragmatism and Sociology 1955 See also editNormlessnessReferences editNotes edit The first and most fundamental rule is Consider social facts as things Durkheim 1895 14 Collins 1975 p 539 Durkheim was the first to seriously use the comparative method correctly in the scientific sense Durkheim 1960 1892 p 9 Science cannot describe individuals but only types If human societies cannot be classified they must remain inaccessible to scientific description Mestrovic 1993 p 37 While Durkheim did not become a Rabbi he may have transformed his father s philosophical and moral concerns into something new his version of sociology Hassard 1995 p 15 Suicide is indeed the paradigm case of Durkheim s positivism it remains the exemplar of the sociological application of statistics Durkheim 1915 p 322 They are not homogeneous with the visible things among which we place them They may well take from these things the outward and material forms in which they are represented but they owe none of their efficacy to them They are not united by external bonds to the different supports upon which they alight they have no roots there according to an expression we have already used and which serves best for characterizing them they are added to them So there are no objects which are predestined to receive them to the exclusion of all others even the most insignificant and vulgar may do so accidental circumstances decide which are the chosen ones For example the essay De quelques formes primitives de classification 1902 written with Marcel Mauss See Durkheim 1912 p 14 17 19 22 Bourdieu amp Passeron 1967 pp 167 68 For speaking more generally all the social sciences now live in the house of Durkheimism unbeknownst to them as it were because they walked into it backwards Citations edit Marchand Jean Jose 24 June 1974 Claude Levi Strauss 3eme partie interview Archives du XXeme siecle Montigny sur Aube l Institut national de l audiovisuel INA Archived from the original 17 October 2012 a b c d e f g Calhoun 2002 p 107 Kim Sung Ho 2007 Max Weber Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 24 August 2007 entry http plato stanford edu entries weber Retrieved 17 February 2010 a b c d e Allan 2005 p 104 a b Durkheim Emile 1982 1901 Preface to the Second Edition Pp 34 47 in The Rules of Sociological Method and Selected Texts on Sociology and its Method edited by S Lukes translated by W D Halls New York The Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 907940 9 p 45 Durkheim Emile 1993 1893 The Division of Labour in Society translated by G Simpson New York The Free Press p ix Jones Robert Alun 1986 Emile Durkheim His Life and Work 1858 1917 Pp 12 23 in Emile Durkheim An Introduction to Four Major Works Beverly Hills CA SAGE Publications via The Durkheim Pages University of Chicago Tiryakian Edward A For Durkheim Essays in Historical and Cultural Sociology London Ashgate Publishing ISBN 9780754671558 p 21 a b c d e f g Poggi Gianfranco 2000 Durkheim Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 878087 8 a b c d e f g h Calhoun 2002 p 103 Bottomore amp Nisbet 1978 p 8 Lukes 1985 p 64 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Calhoun 2002 p 104 Jones amp Spiro 1995 p 149 a b c d e f g h i Calhoun 2002 p 105 a b Allan 2005 p 105 Pickering 2012 p 11 Hayward 1960a Hayward 1960b Thompson 2002 Durkheim Emile 1960 1892 Montesquieu s Contribution to the Rise of Social Science In Montesquieu and Rousseau Forerunners of Sociology translated by R Manheim Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press p 9 a b Morrison 2006 p 152 Strenski 1997 pp 1 2 Pickering 2001 p 79 Allan 2005 p 102 Allan 2005 p 136 Durkheim Emile 2011 1925 Moral Education translated by E K Wilson and H Schnurer Mineola NY Dover Publications ISBN 9780486424989 p 102 Popolo 2011 pp 97 Brinton amp Nee 2001 pp 11 a b c d e f Durkheim Emile 2007 1895 The Rules of Sociological Method Pp 95 102 in Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Text and Readings edited by S Appelrouth and L D Edles Thousand Oaks CA Pine Forge Press ISBN 978 0 7619 2793 8 a b c Durkheim Emile 1938 1895 The Rules of Sociological Method translated by S A Solovay and J H Mueller edited by G E G Catlin a b c d Allan 2005 p 103 Allan 2005 pp 105 06 a b c d e f g h Allan 2005 p 106 a b c Durkheim Emile 1994 1895 Social facts Pp 433 40 in Readings in the Philosophy of Social Science edited by M Martin and L C McIntyre Boston MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 13296 1 p 433 34 Allan 2005 p 107 a b c d e f g h i j Calhoun 2002 p 106 Kim Sung Ho 2007 Max Weber Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 17 February 2010 a b Allan 2005 p 108 Kenneth Allan Kenneth D Allan 2 November 2005 Explorations in Classical Sociological Theory Seeing the Social World Pine Forge Press p 108 ISBN 978 1 4129 0572 5 a b Allan 2005 p 109 Guha Abhijit December 2021 An Open Letter to Emile Durkheim Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India 70 2 256 263 doi 10 1177 09767479211057745 S2CID 245132986 Allan 2005 p 110 Allan 2005 pp 111 127 a b c d Sztompka 2002 p 500 a b c Allan 2005 p 125 a b c Allan 2005 p 137 Allan 2005 p 123 Allan 2005 pp 123 24 a b c Allan 2005 pp 132 33 a b c d Durkheim Emile 1974 1953 Sociology and Philosophy translated by D F Pocock with introduction by J G Peristiany Toronto Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 908580 6 LCCN 74 19680 Allan 2005 pp 125 134 a b Allan 2005 p 134 a b c Allan 2005 p 113 Allan 2005 pp 128 130 Allan 2005 p 128 129 137 a b Allan 2005 p 129 a b c Introduction to Sociology 2 ed OpenStax p 138 ISBN 978 1 947172 11 1 Retrieved 7 April 2018 7 2 Explaining Deviance Sociology Understanding and Changing the Social World University of Minnesota Libraries 2016 ISBN 978 1 946135 24 7 Allan 2005 p 131 a b Mueller Anna S Abrutyn Seth Pescosolido Bernice Diefendorf Sarah 2021 The Social Roots of Suicide Theorizing How the External Social World Matters to Suicide and Suicide Prevention Frontiers in Psychology 12 621569 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 621569 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 8044307 PMID 33868089 Stark amp Bainbridge 1996 p 32 Pope amp Danigelis 1981 Freedman David A 2002 The Ecological Fallacy Berkeley Dept of Statistics University of California Selvin 1965 van Poppel amp Day 1996 p 500 Berk 2006 pp 78 79 Inkeles 1959 Johnson 1965 Gibbs amp Martin 1958 Berk 2006 p 60 Allan 2005 pp 112 15 Durkheim Emile 1964 1915 The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life translated by J W Swain London George Allen amp Unwin via Project Gutenberg 2012 p 47 a b Allan 2005 p 115 Pals 2006 pp 95 100 112 113 Allan 2005 pp 116 118 120 137 Allan 2005 p 116 Lukes 1985 p 25 a b c d e Durkheim Emile 1964 1915 The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life translated by J W Swain London George Allen amp Unwin via Project Gutenberg 2012 Allan 2005 pp 112 13 a b c d e f Allan 2005 p 114 Allan 2005 p 112 McKinnon 2014 Thomassen 2012 Jones Robert Alun 1986 The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life 1912 Pp 115 55 in Emile Durkheim An Introduction to Four Major Works Beverly Hills CA SAGE Publications via The Durkheim Pages University of Chicago s 7 Critical Remarks Durkheim Emile 2003 1912 Les formes elementaires de la vie religieuse 5th ed Presses Universitaires de France p 628 Durkheim Emile 1964 The elementary forms of the religious life London Allen amp Unwin Jones T Anthony June 1981 Durkheim Deviance and Development Opportunities Lost and Regained Social Forces 59 Special Issue 1009 1024 doi 10 2307 2577978 JSTOR 2577978 Durkheim Emile 2004 Sociologie et Philosophie Paris Presses Universitaires de France p 50 Nefes 2013 a b Kieser Hans Lukas 29 April 2021 Europe s Seminal Proto Fascist Historically Approaching Ziya Gokalp Mentor of Turkish Nationalism Die Welt des Islams 61 4 411 447 doi 10 1163 15700607 61020008 ISSN 1570 0607 S2CID 241148959 Smith David Norman 1995 Ziya Gokalp and Emile Durkheim sociology as an apology for chauvinism Durkheimian Studies Etudes Durkheimiennes 1 45 50 ISSN 1362 024X JSTOR 44708513 Gross 2006 Searle 2006 Lukes Steven 2007 Tsohatzidis Savas L ed Searle versus Durkheim Intentional Acts and Institutional Facts Essays on John Searle s Social Ontology Theory and Decision Library Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 191 202 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 6104 2 9 ISBN 978 1 4020 6104 2 retrieved 5 December 2020 Gilbert Margaret 1989 On Social Facts chap 4 s 2 Durkheim Emile 1964 1912 The Elementary Forms of Religious Life London Allen amp Unwin Carls Paul Emile Durkheim 1858 1917 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 15 November 2017 Thompson Kenneth 2012 Readings from Emile Durkheim Routledge p 148 ISBN 9781134951260 Retrieved 15 November 2017 Bibliography edit Allan Kenneth 2005 Explorations in Classical Sociological Theory Seeing the Social World Pine Forge Press ISBN 978 1 4129 0572 5 Berk Bernard B 2006 Macro micro relationships in Durkheim s analysis of egoistic suicide Sociological Theory 24 1 58 80 doi 10 1111 j 0735 2751 2006 00264 x S2CID 144703762 Bottomore Tom Nisbet Robert 1978 A History of Sociological Analysis Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 03023 1 Bourdieu Pierre Passeron Jean Claude 1967 Sociology and philosophy in France since 1945 death and resurrection of a philosophy without subject Social Research 34 1 162 212 JSTOR 40969868 Brinton Mary C Nee Victor 2001 The New Institutionalism in Sociology Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4276 4 Calhoun Craig J 2002 Classical Sociological Theory Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 21348 2 Collins Randall 1975 Conflict Sociology Toward an Explanatory Science New York Academic Press ISBN 9780121813505 Durkheim Emile 1974 1953 Sociology and Philosophy Translated by D F Pocock with an introduction by J G Peristiany Toronto The Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 908580 6 LCCN 74 19680 Durkheim Emile 1982 Preface to the second edition The Rules of Sociological Method and Selected Texts on Sociology and its Method Edited with an introduction by Steven Lukes translated by W D Halls New York The Free Press pp 34 47 ISBN 978 0 02 907940 9 Durkheim Emile 1994 Social facts In Martin Michael McIntyre Lee C eds Readings in the Philosophy of Social Science Boston MA MIT Press pp 433 440 ISBN 978 0 262 13296 1 Durkheim Emile 2007 The rules of sociological method 1895 In Appelrouth Scott Edles Laura Desfor eds Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Text and Readings Thousand Oaks CA Pine Forge Press pp 95 102 ISBN 978 0 7619 2793 8 Durkheim Emile 2009 1953 Sociology and philosophy Routledge Revivals Translated by D F Pocock with an introduction by J G Peristiany Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 55770 2 Gibbs Jack P Martin Walter T 1958 A theory of status integration and its relationship to suicide American Sociological Review 23 2 140 147 doi 10 2307 2088997 JSTOR 2088997 Gross Neil 2006 Comment on Searle Anthropological Theory 6 1 45 56 doi 10 1177 1463499606061734 S2CID 144798682 Hassard John 1995 Sociology and Organization Theory Positivism Paradigms and Postmodernity Cambridge Studies in Management Vol 20 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48458 9 Hayward J E S 1960a Solidarist Syndicalism Durkheim and DuGuit part I The Sociological Review 8 1 17 36 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1960 tb02608 x S2CID 151998089 Hayward J E S 1960b Solidarist Syndicalism Durkheim and DuGuit part II The Sociological Review 8 2 185 202 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1960 tb01034 x S2CID 144318188 Inkeles A 1959 Personality and social structure In R K Merton L Broom L S Cottrell eds Sociological Today New York Basic Books pp 249 276 Johnson Barclay D 1965 Durkheim s one cause of suicide American Sociological Review 30 6 875 886 doi 10 2307 2090966 JSTOR 2090966 PMID 5846308 S2CID 43242167 Jones Robert Alun Spiro Rand J 1995 Contextualization cognitive flexibility and hypertext the convergence of interpretive theory cognitive psychology and advanced information technologies In Susan Leigh Star ed The Cultures of Computing Sociological Review Monographs Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19282 4 Lukes Steven 1985 Emile Durkheim His Life and Work a Historical and Critical Study Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1283 5 Lukes Steven 2007 Searle versus Durkheim In Savas Tsohatzidis ed Intentional Acts and Institutional Facts Dordrecht Springer pp 191 202 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 6104 2 9 ISBN 978 1 4020 6103 5 permanent dead link McKinnon A 2014 Elementary forms of the metaphorical life tropes at work in Durkheim s theory of the religious PDF Journal of Classical Sociology 14 2 203 221 doi 10 1177 1468795x13494130 hdl 2164 3284 S2CID 144074274 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Mestrovic Stjepan 1993 1988 Emile Durkheim and the Reformation of Sociology Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8476 7867 9 Morrison Ken 2006 Marx Durkheim Weber Formations of Modern Social Thought 2nd ed London SAGE ISBN 978 0 7619 7055 2 Nefes Turkay Salim 2013 Ziya Gokalp s adaptation of Emile Durkheim s sociology in his formulation of the modern Turkish nation International Sociology 28 3 335 350 doi 10 1177 0268580913479811 S2CID 143694790 Pals Daniel L 2006 Society as Sacred Emile Durkheim Eight Theories of Religion Oxford University Press pp 85 117 ISBN 0 19 516570 5 Pickering W S F 2001 The enigma of Durkheim s Jewishness Critical Assessments of Leading Sociologists Vol 1 In conjunction with the British Centre for Durkheimian Studies Routledge pp 62 87 ISBN 978 0 4152 0561 0 Pickering W S F 2012 Reflections on the death of Emile Durkheim In W S F Pickering Massimo Rosati eds Suffering and Evil The Durkheimian Legacy Essays in Commemoration of the 90th Anniversary of Durkheim s Death 1st paperback ed New York Berghahn Books pp 11 28 ISBN 978 0857456458 Poggi Gianfranco 2000 Durkheim Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 878087 8 Pope Whitney Danigelis Nick 1981 Sociology s one law Social Forces 60 2 496 514 doi 10 1093 sf 60 2 495 JSTOR 2578447 Popolo Damian 2011 A New Science of International Relations Modernity Complexity and the Kosovo Conflict Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1 4094 1226 7 Searle John 2006 Durkheim versus Searle and the waves of thought reply to Gross Anthropological Theory 6 1 57 69 doi 10 1177 1463499606061735 S2CID 144144906 Selvin Hanan C 1965 Durkheim s Suicide further thoughts on a methodological classic In Robert A Nisbet ed Emile Durkheim Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall pp 113 136 Stark Rodney Bainbridge William Sims 1996 Religion Deviance and Social Control Routledge ISBN 9780415915298 Strenski Ivan 1997 Durkheim and the Jews of France Chicago IL University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 77735 1 Sztompka Piotr 2002 Socjologia Znak ISBN 978 83 240 0218 4 Thomassen Bjorn 2012 Emile Durkheim between Gabriel Tarde and Arnold van Gennep founding moments of sociology and anthropology Social Anthropology 20 3 231 249 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8676 2012 00204 x Thompson Kenneth 2002 Emile Durkheim 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28530 8 van Poppel Frans Day Lincoln H 1996 AtTest of Durkheim s theory of suicide without committing the ecological fallacy American Sociological Review 61 3 500 507 doi 10 2307 2096361 JSTOR 2096361 Further reading editBellah Robert N ed 1973 Emile Durkheim On Morality and Society Selected Writings Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 17336 8 Cotterrell Roger 1999 Emile Durkheim Law in a Moral Domain Edinburgh University Press Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 3808 4 ISBN 978 0 8047 3808 8 Cotterrell Roger ed 2010 Emile Durkheim Justice Morality and Politics Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 2711 1 Douglas Jack D 1973 The Social Meanings of Suicide Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02812 5 Eitzen Stanley D and Maxine Baca Zinn 1997 Social Problems 11th ed Needham Heights MA Allyn and Bacon ISBN 0 205 54796 6 Giddens Anthony ed 1972 Emile Durkheim Selected Writings London Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 09712 6 ISBN 978 0 521 09712 3 Giddens Anthony ed 1986 Durkheim on Politics and the State Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 0 7456 0131 6 Henslin James M 1996 Essentials of Sociology A Down to Earth Approach Needham Heights MA Allyn and Bacon ISBN 0 205 17480 9 ISBN 978 0 205 17480 5 Jones Susan Stedman 2001 Durkheim Reconsidered Polity ISBN 0 7456 1616 X ISBN 978 0 7456 1616 2 Lemert Charles 2006 Durkheim s Ghosts Cultural Logics and Social Things Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 84266 2 ISBN 978 0 521 84266 2 Leroux Robert Histoire et sociologie en France De l histoire science a la sociologie durkheimienne Paris Presses Universitaires de France 1998 Lockwood David 1992 Solidarity and Schism The Problem of Disorder in Durkheimian and Marxist Sociology Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 827717 2 ISBN 978 0 19 827717 0 Macionis John J 1991 Sociology 3rd ed Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 820358 X Osipova Elena 1989 Emile Durkheim s Sociology In Igor Kon ed A History of Classical Sociology Translated by H Campbell Creighton Moscow Progress Publishers pp 206 254 Archived from the original DOC DjVu on 14 May 2011 Pickering W S F 2000 Durkheim and Representations Routledge ISBN 0 415 19090 8 Pickering W S F ed 1979 Durkheim Essays on Morals and Education Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7100 0321 8 Pickering W S F ed 1975 Durkheim on Religion Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7100 8108 1 Siegel Larry J 2007 Criminology Theories Patterns and Typologies 7th ed Wadsworth Thomson Learning ISBN 0 495 00572 X ISBN 978 0 495 00572 8 Tekiner Deniz 2002 German Idealist Foundations of Durkheim s Sociology and Teleology of Knowledge Theory and Science III 1 Online publication External links editEmile Durkheim at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Resources related to research BEROSE International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology Durkheim Emile 1858 1917 Paris 2015 ISSN 2648 2770 Works by Emile Durkheim at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Emile Durkheim at Internet Archive Works by Emile Durkheim at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Emile Durkheim at Curlie L Ecoles des Hautes Etudes Internationales et Poltiques HEI HEP The Durkheim pages University of Chicago DD Digital Durkheim Bibliography on Durkheim McMaster University Archived 20 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Annotated bibliography on Durkheim and Religion University of North Carolina Archived 9 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Review material for studying Emile Durkheim Institut Marcel Mauss a l EHESS Emile Durkheim Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Portals nbsp Biography nbsp France nbsp Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emile Durkheim amp oldid 1199320355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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