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Society

A society (/səˈsəti/) is a group of individuals involved in persistent social interaction or a large social group sharing the same spatial or social territory, typically subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations. Societies are characterized by patterns of relationships (social relations) between individuals who share a distinctive culture and institutions; a given society may be described as the sum total of such relationships among its constituent members.

Clockwise from top left: A family in Savannakhet, Laos; a crowd shopping in Maharashtra, India; a military parade on a Spanish national holiday.

Human social structures are complex and highly cooperative, featuring the specialization of labor via social roles. Societies construct roles and other patterns of behavior by deeming certain actions or concepts acceptable or unacceptable—these expectations around behavior within a given society are known as societal norms. So far as it is collaborative, a society can enable its members to benefit in ways that would otherwise be difficult on an individual basis.

Societies vary based on level of technology and type of economic activity. Larger societies with larger food surpluses often exhibit stratification or dominance patterns. Societies can have many different forms of government, various ways of understanding kinship, and different gender roles. Human behavior varies immensely between different societies; humans shape society, but society in turn shapes human beings.

Etymology and usage edit

The term "society" often refers to a large group of people in an ordered community, in a country or several similar countries, or the 'state of being with other people', e.g. "they lived in medieval society."[1] The term dates back to at least 1513 and comes from the 12th-century French societe (modern French société) meaning 'company'.[2] Societe was in turn derived from the Latin word societas ('fellowship,' 'alliance', 'association'), which in turn was derived from the noun socius ("comrade, friend, ally").[2]

Conceptions edit

In biology edit

 
Ant social ethology: Ants are eusocial insects. The social group enables its members to benefit in ways that would not otherwise be possible on an individual basis.

Humans, along with their closest relatives bonobos and chimpanzees, are highly social animals. This biological context suggests that the underlying sociability required for the formation of societies is hardwired into human nature.[3] Human society features high degrees of cooperation, and differs in important ways from groups of chimps and bonobos, including the parental role of males,[4][5] the use of language to communicate,[3] the specialization of labor,[6] and the tendency to build "nests" (multigenerational camps, town, or cities).[6]

Some biologists, including entomologist E.O. Wilson, categorize humans as eusocial, placing humans with ants in the highest level of sociability on the spectrum of animal ethology, although others disagree.[6] Social group living may have evolved in humans due to group selection in physical environments that made survival difficult.[7]

In sociology edit

In Western sociology, there are three dominant paradigms for understanding society: functionalism (also known as structural functionalism), conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism.[8]

Functionalism edit

According to the functionalist school of thought, individuals in society work together like organs in the body to create emergent behavior, sometimes referred to as collective consciousness.[9] 19th century sociologists Auguste Comte and Émile Durkheim, for example, believed that society constitutes a separate "level" of reality, distinct from both biological and inorganic matter. Explanations of social phenomena had therefore to be constructed within this level, individuals being merely transient occupants of comparatively stable social roles.[10]

Conflict theory edit

Conflict theorists take the opposite view, and posit that individuals and social groups or social classes within society interact on the basis of conflict rather than agreement. One prominent conflict theorist is Karl Marx who conceived of society as operating on an economic "base" with a "superstructure" of government, family, religion and culture. Marx argues that the economic base determines the superstructure, and that throughout history, societal change has been driven by conflict between laborers and those who own the means of production.[11]

Symbolic interactionism edit

Symbolic interactionism is a microsociological theory that focuses on individuals and how the individual relates to society.[12] Symbolic interactionists study humans' use of shared language to create common symbols and meanings,[13] and use this frame of reference to understand how individuals interact to create symbolic worlds, and in turn, how these worlds shape individual behaviors.[14]

In the latter half of the 20th century, theorists began to view society as socially constructed.[15] In this vein, sociologist Peter L. Berger describes society as "dialectic": Society is created by humans, but this creation turns in turn creates or molds humans.[16]

Non-Western views edit

 
José Rizal, a theorist of colonial societies

The sociologic emphasis placed on functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism, has been criticized as Eurocentric.[17] The Malaysian sociologist Syed Farid al-Attas, for example, argues that Western thinkers are particularly interested in the implications of modernity, and that their analysis of non-Western cultures is therefore limited in scope.[17] As examples of nonwestern thinkers who took a systematic approach to understanding society, al-Attas mentions Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406) and José Rizal (1861–1896).[17]

Khaldun, an Arab living in the 14th century, understood society, along with the rest of the universe, as having "meaningful configuration", with its perceived randomness attributable to hidden causes. Khaldun conceptualized social structures as having two fundamental forms: nomadic and sedentary. Nomadic life has high social cohesion (asabijja), which Khaldun argued arose from kinship, shared customs, and a shared need for defense. Sedentary life, in Khaldun's view, was marked by secularization, decreased social cohesion, and increased interest in luxury.[18] Rizal was a Filipino nationalist living toward the end of the Spanish Colonial Period who theorized about colonial societies. Rizal argued that indolence, which the Spanish used to justify their colonial occupation, was instead caused by the colonial occupation. Rizal compared the pre-colonial era, when the Filipinos controlled trade routes and had higher economic activity, to the period of colonial rule, and argued that exploitation, economic disorder, and colonial policies that discouraged farming led to a decreased interest in work.[19]

Types edit

Sociologists tend to classify societies based on their level of technology, and place societies in three broad categories: pre-industrial, industrial, and postindustrial.[20]

Subdivisions of these categories vary, and classifications are often based on level of technology, communication, and economy. One example of such a classification comes from sociologist Gerhard Lenski who lists: (1) hunting and gathering; (2) horticultural; (3) agricultural; and (4) industrial; as well as specialized societies (e.g., fishing or herding).[21]

Some cultures have developed over time toward more complex forms of organization and control. This cultural evolution has a profound effect on patterns of community. Hunter-gatherer tribes have, at times, settled around seasonal food stocks to become agrarian villages. Villages have grown to become towns and cities. Cities have turned into city-states and nation-states. However, these processes are not unidirectional.[22]

Pre-industrial edit

In a pre-industrial society, food production, which is carried out through the use of human and animal labor, is the main economic activity. These societies can be subdivided according to their level of technology and their method of producing food. These subdivisions are hunting and gathering, pastoral, horticultural, and agrarian.[21]

Hunting and gathering edit

 
San people in Botswana start a fire by hand.

The main form of food production in hunter-gatherer societies is the daily collection of wild plants and the hunting of wild animals. Hunter-gatherers move around constantly in search of food.[23] As a result, they do not build permanent villages or create a wide variety of artifacts. The need for mobility also limits the size of these societies, and they usually only form small groups such as bands and tribes,[24] usually with fewer than 50 people per community.[25][24] Bands and tribes are relatively egalitarian, and decisions are reached through consensus. There are no formal political offices containing real power in band societies, rather a chief is merely a person of influence, and leadership is based on personal qualities.[26] The family forms the main social unit, with most members being related by birth or marriage.[27]

The anthropologist Marshall Sahlins described hunter-gatherers as the "original affluent society" due to their extended leisure time: Sahlins estimated that adults in hunter gatherer societies work three to five hours per day.[28][29] This perspective has been challenged by other researchers, who have pointed out high mortality rates and perennial warfare in hunter-gatherer societies.[30][31][32] Proponents of Sahlins' view argue that the general well-being of humans in hunter gatherer societies challenges the purported relationship between technological advancement and human progress.[33][34]

Pastoral edit

 
Maasai men perform adumu, the traditional jumping dance.

Rather than searching for food on a daily basis, members of a pastoral society rely on domesticated herd animals to meet their food needs. Pastoralists typically live a nomadic life, moving their herds from one pasture to another.[35] Community size in pastoral societies is similar to hunter-gatherers (about 50 individuals), but unlike hunter gatherers, pastoral societies usually consist of multiple communities—the average pastoral society contains thousands of people. This is because pastoral groups tend to live in open areas where movement is easy, which enables political integration.[36] Pastoral societies tend to create a food surplus, and have specialized labor[20] and high levels of inequality.[36]

Horticultural edit

Fruits and vegetables grown in garden plots, that have been cleared from the jungle or forest, provide the main source of food in a horticultural society. These societies have a similar level of technology and complexity to pastoral societies.[37] Along with pastoral societies, horticultural societies emerged about 10,000 years ago, after technological changes of the Agricultural Revolution made it possible to cultivate crops and raise animals.[37] Horticulturists use human labor and simple tools to cultivate the land for one or more seasons. When the land becomes barren, horticulturists clear a new plot and leave the old plot to revert to its natural state. They may return to the original land several years later and begin the process again. By rotating their garden plots, horticulturists can stay in one area for a long period of time. This allows them to build permanent or semi-permanent villages.[38]

As with pastoral societies, surplus food leads to a more complex division of labor. Specialized roles in horticultural societies include craftspeople, shamans (religious leaders), and traders.[38] This role specialization allows horticultural societies to create a variety of artifacts. Scarce, defensible resources can lead to wealth inequalities in horticultural political systems.[39]

Agrarian edit

 
Ploughing with oxen in the 15th century

Agrarian societies use agricultural technological advances to cultivate crops over a large area. Lenski differentiates between horticultural and agrarian societies by the use of the plow.[40] Larger food supplies due to improved technology mean agrarian communities are larger than horticultural communities. A greater food surplus results in towns that become centers of trade. Economic trade in turn leads to increased specialization, including a ruling class, as well as educators, craftspeople, merchants, and religious figures, who do not directly participate in the production of food.[41]

Agrarian societies are especially noted for their extremes of social classes and rigid social mobility.[42] As land is the major source of wealth, social hierarchy develops based on landownership and not labor. The system of stratification is characterized by three coinciding contrasts: governing class versus the masses, urban minority versus peasant majority, and literate minority versus illiterate majority. This results in two distinct subcultures; the urban elite versus the peasant masses. Moreover, this means cultural differences within agrarian societies are greater than differences between them.[43]

The landowning strata typically combine government, religious, and military institutions to justify and enforce their ownership, and support elaborate patterns of consumption, slavery, serfdom, or peonage is commonly the lot of the primary producer. Rulers of agrarian societies often do not manage their empire for the common good or in the name of the public interest, but as property they own.[44] Caste systems, as historically found in South Asia, are associated with agrarian societies, where lifelong agricultural routines depend upon a rigid sense of duty and discipline. The scholar Donald Brown suggests that an emphasis in the modern West on personal liberties and freedoms was in large part a reaction to the steep and rigid stratification of agrarian societies.[45]

Industrial edit

 
Industrial transportation, including trains, can stabilize the economy, leading to population growth.

Industrial societies, which emerged in the 18th century in the Industrial Revolution, rely heavily on machines powered by external sources for the mass production of goods.[46][47] Whereas in pre-industrial societies the majority of labor takes place in primary industries focused on extracting raw materials (farming, fishing, mining, etc.), in industrial societies, labor is mostly focused on processing raw materials into finished products.[48] Present-day societies vary in their degree of industrialization, with some using mostly newer energy sources (e.g. coal, oil, and nuclear energy), and others continuing to rely on human and animal power.[49]

Industrialization is associated with population booms and the growth of cities. Increased productivity, as well as the stability caused by improved transportation, leads to decreased mortality and resulting population growth.[50] Centralized production of goods in factories and a decreased need for agricultural labor leads to urbanization.[47][51] Industrial societies are often capitalist, and have high degrees of inequality along with high social mobility, as businesspeople use the market to amass large amounts of wealth.[47] Working conditions in factories are generally restrictive and harsh.[52] Workers, who have common interests, may organize into labor unions to advance those interests.[53]

On the whole, industrial societies are marked by the increased power of human beings. Technological advancements mean that industrial societies have increased potential for deadly warfare. Governments use information technologies to exert greater control over the populace. Industrial societies also have an increased environmental impact.[54]

Post-industrial edit

Post-industrial societies are societies dominated by information and services, rather than the production of goods.[55] Advanced industrial societies see a shift toward an increase in service sectors, over manufacturing. Service industries include education, health and finance.[56]

Information edit

 
World Summit on the Information Society, Geneva

An information society is a society where the usage, creation, distribution, manipulation and integration of information is a significant activity.[57] Proponents of the idea that modern-day global society is an information society posit that information technologies are impacting most important forms of social organization, including education, economy, health, government, warfare, and levels of democracy.[58] Although the concept of information society has been discussed since the 1930s, in the present day, it is almost always applied to ways that information technologies impact society and culture. It therefore covers the effects of computers and telecommunications on the home, the workplace, schools, government, and various communities and organizations, as well as the emergence of new social forms in cyberspace.[59]

Knowledge edit

 
The Seoul Cyworld control room

As the access to electronic information resources increased at the beginning of the 21st century, special attention was extended from the information society to the knowledge society. A knowledge society generates, shares, and makes available to all members of the society knowledge that may be used to improve the human condition.[60] A knowledge society differs from an information society in that it transforms information into resources that allow society to take effective action, rather than only creating and disseminating raw data.[61]

Characteristics edit

Norms and roles edit

Social norms are shared standards of acceptable behavior by groups.[62][63] Social norms, which can both be informal understandings that govern the behavior of members of a society, as well as be codified into rules and laws,[64] are powerful drivers of human behavior.[65]

Social roles are norms, duties, and patterns of behavior that relate to an individual's social status.[66] In functionalist thought, individuals form the structure of society by occupying social roles.[10] According to symbolic interactionism, individuals use symbols to navigate and communicate roles.[67] Erving Goffman used the metaphor of a theater to develop the dramaturgical lens, which argues that roles provide scripts that govern social interactions.[67]

Gender and kinship edit

 
Egyptian family riding on a donkey-drawn cart in 2019. Familial relationships are one of the most important organizing principles in many societies.

The division of humans into male and female gender roles has been marked culturally by a corresponding division of norms, practices, dress, behavior, rights, duties, privileges, status, and power. Some argue that gender roles arise naturally from sex differences, which lead to a division of labor where women take on reproductive labor and other domestic roles.[68] Gender roles have varied historically, and challenges to predominant gender norms have recurred in many societies.[69][70]

All human societies organize, recognize and classify types of social relationships based on relations between parents, children and other descendants (consanguinity), and relations through marriage (affinity). There is also a third type of familial relationship applied to godparents or adoptive children (fictive). These culturally defined relationships are referred to as kinship. In many societies, it is one of the most important social organizing principles and plays a role in transmitting status and inheritance.[71] All societies have rules of incest taboo, according to which marriage between certain kinds of kin relations are prohibited; and some societies also have rules of preferential marriage with certain other kin relations.[72]

Ethnicity edit

Human ethnic groups are a social category that identify together as a group based on shared attributes that distinguish them from other groups. These shared attributes can be a common set of traditions, ancestry, language, history, society, culture, nation, religion, or social treatment within their residing area.[73][74] There is no generally accepted definition of what constitutes an ethnic group,[75] and humans have evolved the ability to change affiliation with social groups relatively easily, including leaving groups with previously strong alliances, if doing so is seen as providing personal advantages.[76] Ethnicity is separate from the concept of race, which is based on physical characteristics, although both are socially constructed.[77] Assigning ethnicity to a certain population is complicated, as even within common ethnic designations there can be a diverse range of subgroups, and the makeup of these ethnic groups can change over time at both the collective and individual level.[78] Ethnic groupings can play a powerful role in the social identity and solidarity of ethnopolitical units. Ethnic identity has been closely tied to the rise of the nation state as the predominant form of political organization in the 19th and 20th centuries.[79][80][81]

Government and politics edit

 
The United Nations headquarters in New York City, which houses one of the world's largest political organizations

Governments create laws and policies that affect the people that they govern. There have been many forms of government throughout human history, with various ways of allocating power, and with different levels and means of control over the population.[82] In early history, distribution of political power was determined by the availability of fresh water, fertile soil, and temperate climate of different locations.[83] As farming populations gathered in larger and denser communities, interactions between different groups increased, leading to the further development of governance within and between communities.[84]

As of 2022, according to The Economist, 43% of national governments were democracies, 35% autocracies, and 22% containing elements of both.[85] Many countries have formed international political organizations and alliances, the largest being the United Nations with 193 member states.[86][87]

Trade and economics edit

 
Long-distance spice trade routes along the Silk Road (green) and other routes (red)

Trade, the voluntary exchange of goods and services, has long been an aspect of human societies, and it is seen as a characteristic that differentiates humans from other animals.[88] Trade has even been cited as a practice that gave Homo sapiens a major advantage over other hominids; evidence suggests early H. sapiens made use of long-distance trade routes to exchange goods and ideas, leading to cultural explosions and providing additional food sources when hunting was sparse. Such trade networks did not exist for the now-extinct Neanderthals.[88][89] Early trade involved materials for creating tools, like obsidian, exchanged over short distances.[90] In contrast, throughout antiquity and the medieval period, some of the most influential long-distance routes carried food and luxury goods, such as the spice trade.[91]

Early human economies were more likely to be based around gift giving than a bartering system.[92] Early money consisted of commodities; the oldest being in the form of cattle and the most widely used being cowrie shells.[93][94] Money has since evolved into governmental issued coins, paper and electronic money.[95][96] Human study of economics is a social science that looks at how societies distribute scarce resources among different people.[97] There are massive inequalities in the division of wealth among humans; as of 2018 in China, Europe, and the United States, the richest tenth of humans hold more than seven-tenths of those regions' total wealth.[98]

Conflict edit

 
Napoleon's retreat after his failed invasion of Russia in 1812 (oil painting by Adolph Northen, 1851)

The willingness of humans to kill other members of their species en masse through organized conflict (i.e. war) has long been the subject of debate. One school of thought is that war evolved as a means to eliminate competitors, and that violence is an innate human characteristic. Humans commit violence against other humans at a rate comparable to other primates (although humans kill adults at a relatively high rate and have a relatively low rate of infanticide).[99]

Another school of thought suggests that war is a relatively recent phenomenon and appeared due to changing social conditions.[100] While not settled, the current evidence suggests warlike behavior only became common about 10,000 years ago, and in many regions even more recently.[100]

Phylogenetic analysis predicts 2% of human deaths to be caused by homicide, which approximately matches the rate of homicide in band societies.[101] However, rates of violence vary widely according to societal norms,[101][102] and rates of homicide in societies that have legal systems and strong cultural attitudes against violence stand at about 0.01%.[102]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

society, other, uses, disambiguation, society, group, individuals, involved, persistent, social, interaction, large, social, group, sharing, same, spatial, social, territory, typically, subject, same, political, authority, dominant, cultural, expectations, soc. For other uses see Society disambiguation A society s e ˈ s aɪ e t i is a group of individuals involved in persistent social interaction or a large social group sharing the same spatial or social territory typically subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations Societies are characterized by patterns of relationships social relations between individuals who share a distinctive culture and institutions a given society may be described as the sum total of such relationships among its constituent members Clockwise from top left A family in Savannakhet Laos a crowd shopping in Maharashtra India a military parade on a Spanish national holiday Human social structures are complex and highly cooperative featuring the specialization of labor via social roles Societies construct roles and other patterns of behavior by deeming certain actions or concepts acceptable or unacceptable these expectations around behavior within a given society are known as societal norms So far as it is collaborative a society can enable its members to benefit in ways that would otherwise be difficult on an individual basis Societies vary based on level of technology and type of economic activity Larger societies with larger food surpluses often exhibit stratification or dominance patterns Societies can have many different forms of government various ways of understanding kinship and different gender roles Human behavior varies immensely between different societies humans shape society but society in turn shapes human beings Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 Conceptions 2 1 In biology 2 2 In sociology 2 2 1 Functionalism 2 2 2 Conflict theory 2 2 3 Symbolic interactionism 2 2 4 Non Western views 3 Types 3 1 Pre industrial 3 1 1 Hunting and gathering 3 1 2 Pastoral 3 1 3 Horticultural 3 1 4 Agrarian 3 2 Industrial 3 3 Post industrial 3 3 1 Information 3 3 2 Knowledge 4 Characteristics 4 1 Norms and roles 4 2 Gender and kinship 4 3 Ethnicity 4 4 Government and politics 4 5 Trade and economics 4 6 Conflict 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further readingEtymology and usage editThe term society often refers to a large group of people in an ordered community in a country or several similar countries or the state of being with other people e g they lived in medieval society 1 The term dates back to at least 1513 and comes from the 12th century French societe modern French societe meaning company 2 Societe was in turn derived from the Latin word societas fellowship alliance association which in turn was derived from the noun socius comrade friend ally 2 Conceptions editIn biology edit Further information Sociality nbsp Ant social ethology Ants are eusocial insects The social group enables its members to benefit in ways that would not otherwise be possible on an individual basis Humans along with their closest relatives bonobos and chimpanzees are highly social animals This biological context suggests that the underlying sociability required for the formation of societies is hardwired into human nature 3 Human society features high degrees of cooperation and differs in important ways from groups of chimps and bonobos including the parental role of males 4 5 the use of language to communicate 3 the specialization of labor 6 and the tendency to build nests multigenerational camps town or cities 6 Some biologists including entomologist E O Wilson categorize humans as eusocial placing humans with ants in the highest level of sociability on the spectrum of animal ethology although others disagree 6 Social group living may have evolved in humans due to group selection in physical environments that made survival difficult 7 In sociology edit Further information Sociology In Western sociology there are three dominant paradigms for understanding society functionalism also known as structural functionalism conflict theory and symbolic interactionism 8 Functionalism edit According to the functionalist school of thought individuals in society work together like organs in the body to create emergent behavior sometimes referred to as collective consciousness 9 19th century sociologists Auguste Comte and Emile Durkheim for example believed that society constitutes a separate level of reality distinct from both biological and inorganic matter Explanations of social phenomena had therefore to be constructed within this level individuals being merely transient occupants of comparatively stable social roles 10 Conflict theory edit Conflict theorists take the opposite view and posit that individuals and social groups or social classes within society interact on the basis of conflict rather than agreement One prominent conflict theorist is Karl Marx who conceived of society as operating on an economic base with a superstructure of government family religion and culture Marx argues that the economic base determines the superstructure and that throughout history societal change has been driven by conflict between laborers and those who own the means of production 11 Symbolic interactionism edit Symbolic interactionism is a microsociological theory that focuses on individuals and how the individual relates to society 12 Symbolic interactionists study humans use of shared language to create common symbols and meanings 13 and use this frame of reference to understand how individuals interact to create symbolic worlds and in turn how these worlds shape individual behaviors 14 In the latter half of the 20th century theorists began to view society as socially constructed 15 In this vein sociologist Peter L Berger describes society as dialectic Society is created by humans but this creation turns in turn creates or molds humans 16 Non Western views edit nbsp Jose Rizal a theorist of colonial societiesThe sociologic emphasis placed on functionalism conflict theory and symbolic interactionism has been criticized as Eurocentric 17 The Malaysian sociologist Syed Farid al Attas for example argues that Western thinkers are particularly interested in the implications of modernity and that their analysis of non Western cultures is therefore limited in scope 17 As examples of nonwestern thinkers who took a systematic approach to understanding society al Attas mentions Ibn Khaldun 1332 1406 and Jose Rizal 1861 1896 17 Khaldun an Arab living in the 14th century understood society along with the rest of the universe as having meaningful configuration with its perceived randomness attributable to hidden causes Khaldun conceptualized social structures as having two fundamental forms nomadic and sedentary Nomadic life has high social cohesion asabijja which Khaldun argued arose from kinship shared customs and a shared need for defense Sedentary life in Khaldun s view was marked by secularization decreased social cohesion and increased interest in luxury 18 Rizal was a Filipino nationalist living toward the end of the Spanish Colonial Period who theorized about colonial societies Rizal argued that indolence which the Spanish used to justify their colonial occupation was instead caused by the colonial occupation Rizal compared the pre colonial era when the Filipinos controlled trade routes and had higher economic activity to the period of colonial rule and argued that exploitation economic disorder and colonial policies that discouraged farming led to a decreased interest in work 19 Types editSociologists tend to classify societies based on their level of technology and place societies in three broad categories pre industrial industrial and postindustrial 20 Subdivisions of these categories vary and classifications are often based on level of technology communication and economy One example of such a classification comes from sociologist Gerhard Lenski who lists 1 hunting and gathering 2 horticultural 3 agricultural and 4 industrial as well as specialized societies e g fishing or herding 21 Some cultures have developed over time toward more complex forms of organization and control This cultural evolution has a profound effect on patterns of community Hunter gatherer tribes have at times settled around seasonal food stocks to become agrarian villages Villages have grown to become towns and cities Cities have turned into city states and nation states However these processes are not unidirectional 22 Pre industrial edit Main article Pre industrial society In a pre industrial society food production which is carried out through the use of human and animal labor is the main economic activity These societies can be subdivided according to their level of technology and their method of producing food These subdivisions are hunting and gathering pastoral horticultural and agrarian 21 Hunting and gathering edit Main article Hunter gatherer nbsp San people in Botswana start a fire by hand The main form of food production in hunter gatherer societies is the daily collection of wild plants and the hunting of wild animals Hunter gatherers move around constantly in search of food 23 As a result they do not build permanent villages or create a wide variety of artifacts The need for mobility also limits the size of these societies and they usually only form small groups such as bands and tribes 24 usually with fewer than 50 people per community 25 24 Bands and tribes are relatively egalitarian and decisions are reached through consensus There are no formal political offices containing real power in band societies rather a chief is merely a person of influence and leadership is based on personal qualities 26 The family forms the main social unit with most members being related by birth or marriage 27 The anthropologist Marshall Sahlins described hunter gatherers as the original affluent society due to their extended leisure time Sahlins estimated that adults in hunter gatherer societies work three to five hours per day 28 29 This perspective has been challenged by other researchers who have pointed out high mortality rates and perennial warfare in hunter gatherer societies 30 31 32 Proponents of Sahlins view argue that the general well being of humans in hunter gatherer societies challenges the purported relationship between technological advancement and human progress 33 34 Pastoral edit Main article Pastoral society nbsp Maasai men perform adumu the traditional jumping dance Rather than searching for food on a daily basis members of a pastoral society rely on domesticated herd animals to meet their food needs Pastoralists typically live a nomadic life moving their herds from one pasture to another 35 Community size in pastoral societies is similar to hunter gatherers about 50 individuals but unlike hunter gatherers pastoral societies usually consist of multiple communities the average pastoral society contains thousands of people This is because pastoral groups tend to live in open areas where movement is easy which enables political integration 36 Pastoral societies tend to create a food surplus and have specialized labor 20 and high levels of inequality 36 Horticultural edit Further information Horticulture and Subsistence pattern Fruits and vegetables grown in garden plots that have been cleared from the jungle or forest provide the main source of food in a horticultural society These societies have a similar level of technology and complexity to pastoral societies 37 Along with pastoral societies horticultural societies emerged about 10 000 years ago after technological changes of the Agricultural Revolution made it possible to cultivate crops and raise animals 37 Horticulturists use human labor and simple tools to cultivate the land for one or more seasons When the land becomes barren horticulturists clear a new plot and leave the old plot to revert to its natural state They may return to the original land several years later and begin the process again By rotating their garden plots horticulturists can stay in one area for a long period of time This allows them to build permanent or semi permanent villages 38 As with pastoral societies surplus food leads to a more complex division of labor Specialized roles in horticultural societies include craftspeople shamans religious leaders and traders 38 This role specialization allows horticultural societies to create a variety of artifacts Scarce defensible resources can lead to wealth inequalities in horticultural political systems 39 Agrarian edit Main article Agrarian society nbsp Ploughing with oxen in the 15th centuryAgrarian societies use agricultural technological advances to cultivate crops over a large area Lenski differentiates between horticultural and agrarian societies by the use of the plow 40 Larger food supplies due to improved technology mean agrarian communities are larger than horticultural communities A greater food surplus results in towns that become centers of trade Economic trade in turn leads to increased specialization including a ruling class as well as educators craftspeople merchants and religious figures who do not directly participate in the production of food 41 Agrarian societies are especially noted for their extremes of social classes and rigid social mobility 42 As land is the major source of wealth social hierarchy develops based on landownership and not labor The system of stratification is characterized by three coinciding contrasts governing class versus the masses urban minority versus peasant majority and literate minority versus illiterate majority This results in two distinct subcultures the urban elite versus the peasant masses Moreover this means cultural differences within agrarian societies are greater than differences between them 43 The landowning strata typically combine government religious and military institutions to justify and enforce their ownership and support elaborate patterns of consumption slavery serfdom or peonage is commonly the lot of the primary producer Rulers of agrarian societies often do not manage their empire for the common good or in the name of the public interest but as property they own 44 Caste systems as historically found in South Asia are associated with agrarian societies where lifelong agricultural routines depend upon a rigid sense of duty and discipline The scholar Donald Brown suggests that an emphasis in the modern West on personal liberties and freedoms was in large part a reaction to the steep and rigid stratification of agrarian societies 45 Industrial edit Main article Industrial society nbsp Industrial transportation including trains can stabilize the economy leading to population growth Industrial societies which emerged in the 18th century in the Industrial Revolution rely heavily on machines powered by external sources for the mass production of goods 46 47 Whereas in pre industrial societies the majority of labor takes place in primary industries focused on extracting raw materials farming fishing mining etc in industrial societies labor is mostly focused on processing raw materials into finished products 48 Present day societies vary in their degree of industrialization with some using mostly newer energy sources e g coal oil and nuclear energy and others continuing to rely on human and animal power 49 Industrialization is associated with population booms and the growth of cities Increased productivity as well as the stability caused by improved transportation leads to decreased mortality and resulting population growth 50 Centralized production of goods in factories and a decreased need for agricultural labor leads to urbanization 47 51 Industrial societies are often capitalist and have high degrees of inequality along with high social mobility as businesspeople use the market to amass large amounts of wealth 47 Working conditions in factories are generally restrictive and harsh 52 Workers who have common interests may organize into labor unions to advance those interests 53 On the whole industrial societies are marked by the increased power of human beings Technological advancements mean that industrial societies have increased potential for deadly warfare Governments use information technologies to exert greater control over the populace Industrial societies also have an increased environmental impact 54 Post industrial edit Main article Post industrial society See also Information revolution Post industrial societies are societies dominated by information and services rather than the production of goods 55 Advanced industrial societies see a shift toward an increase in service sectors over manufacturing Service industries include education health and finance 56 Information edit Main article Information society nbsp World Summit on the Information Society GenevaAn information society is a society where the usage creation distribution manipulation and integration of information is a significant activity 57 Proponents of the idea that modern day global society is an information society posit that information technologies are impacting most important forms of social organization including education economy health government warfare and levels of democracy 58 Although the concept of information society has been discussed since the 1930s in the present day it is almost always applied to ways that information technologies impact society and culture It therefore covers the effects of computers and telecommunications on the home the workplace schools government and various communities and organizations as well as the emergence of new social forms in cyberspace 59 Knowledge edit Main article Knowledge society nbsp The Seoul Cyworld control roomAs the access to electronic information resources increased at the beginning of the 21st century special attention was extended from the information society to the knowledge society A knowledge society generates shares and makes available to all members of the society knowledge that may be used to improve the human condition 60 A knowledge society differs from an information society in that it transforms information into resources that allow society to take effective action rather than only creating and disseminating raw data 61 Characteristics editNorms and roles edit Social norms are shared standards of acceptable behavior by groups 62 63 Social norms which can both be informal understandings that govern the behavior of members of a society as well as be codified into rules and laws 64 are powerful drivers of human behavior 65 Social roles are norms duties and patterns of behavior that relate to an individual s social status 66 In functionalist thought individuals form the structure of society by occupying social roles 10 According to symbolic interactionism individuals use symbols to navigate and communicate roles 67 Erving Goffman used the metaphor of a theater to develop the dramaturgical lens which argues that roles provide scripts that govern social interactions 67 Gender and kinship edit Main articles Gender Gender role and Kinship nbsp Egyptian family riding on a donkey drawn cart in 2019 Familial relationships are one of the most important organizing principles in many societies The division of humans into male and female gender roles has been marked culturally by a corresponding division of norms practices dress behavior rights duties privileges status and power Some argue that gender roles arise naturally from sex differences which lead to a division of labor where women take on reproductive labor and other domestic roles 68 Gender roles have varied historically and challenges to predominant gender norms have recurred in many societies 69 70 All human societies organize recognize and classify types of social relationships based on relations between parents children and other descendants consanguinity and relations through marriage affinity There is also a third type of familial relationship applied to godparents or adoptive children fictive These culturally defined relationships are referred to as kinship In many societies it is one of the most important social organizing principles and plays a role in transmitting status and inheritance 71 All societies have rules of incest taboo according to which marriage between certain kinds of kin relations are prohibited and some societies also have rules of preferential marriage with certain other kin relations 72 Ethnicity edit Main article Ethnicity Human ethnic groups are a social category that identify together as a group based on shared attributes that distinguish them from other groups These shared attributes can be a common set of traditions ancestry language history society culture nation religion or social treatment within their residing area 73 74 There is no generally accepted definition of what constitutes an ethnic group 75 and humans have evolved the ability to change affiliation with social groups relatively easily including leaving groups with previously strong alliances if doing so is seen as providing personal advantages 76 Ethnicity is separate from the concept of race which is based on physical characteristics although both are socially constructed 77 Assigning ethnicity to a certain population is complicated as even within common ethnic designations there can be a diverse range of subgroups and the makeup of these ethnic groups can change over time at both the collective and individual level 78 Ethnic groupings can play a powerful role in the social identity and solidarity of ethnopolitical units Ethnic identity has been closely tied to the rise of the nation state as the predominant form of political organization in the 19th and 20th centuries 79 80 81 Government and politics edit Main articles Government and Politics nbsp The United Nations headquarters in New York City which houses one of the world s largest political organizationsGovernments create laws and policies that affect the people that they govern There have been many forms of government throughout human history with various ways of allocating power and with different levels and means of control over the population 82 In early history distribution of political power was determined by the availability of fresh water fertile soil and temperate climate of different locations 83 As farming populations gathered in larger and denser communities interactions between different groups increased leading to the further development of governance within and between communities 84 As of 2022 update according to The Economist 43 of national governments were democracies 35 autocracies and 22 containing elements of both 85 Many countries have formed international political organizations and alliances the largest being the United Nations with 193 member states 86 87 Trade and economics edit Main articles Trade and Economics nbsp Long distance spice trade routes along the Silk Road green and other routes red Trade the voluntary exchange of goods and services has long been an aspect of human societies and it is seen as a characteristic that differentiates humans from other animals 88 Trade has even been cited as a practice that gave Homo sapiens a major advantage over other hominids evidence suggests early H sapiens made use of long distance trade routes to exchange goods and ideas leading to cultural explosions and providing additional food sources when hunting was sparse Such trade networks did not exist for the now extinct Neanderthals 88 89 Early trade involved materials for creating tools like obsidian exchanged over short distances 90 In contrast throughout antiquity and the medieval period some of the most influential long distance routes carried food and luxury goods such as the spice trade 91 Early human economies were more likely to be based around gift giving than a bartering system 92 Early money consisted of commodities the oldest being in the form of cattle and the most widely used being cowrie shells 93 94 Money has since evolved into governmental issued coins paper and electronic money 95 96 Human study of economics is a social science that looks at how societies distribute scarce resources among different people 97 There are massive inequalities in the division of wealth among humans as of 2018 in China Europe and the United States the richest tenth of humans hold more than seven tenths of those regions total wealth 98 Conflict edit See also War and Violence nbsp Napoleon s retreat after his failed invasion of Russia in 1812 oil painting by Adolph Northen 1851 The willingness of humans to kill other members of their species en masse through organized conflict i e war has long been the subject of debate One school of thought is that war evolved as a means to eliminate competitors and that violence is an innate human characteristic Humans commit violence against other humans at a rate comparable to other primates although humans kill adults at a relatively high rate and have a relatively low rate of infanticide 99 Another school of thought suggests that war is a relatively recent phenomenon and appeared due to changing social conditions 100 While not settled the current evidence suggests warlike behavior only became common about 10 000 years ago and in many regions even more recently 100 Phylogenetic analysis predicts 2 of human deaths to be caused by homicide which approximately matches the rate of homicide in band societies 101 However rates of violence vary widely according to societal norms 101 102 and rates of homicide in societies that have legal systems and strong cultural attitudes against violence stand at about 0 01 102 See also edit nbsp Society portalCivil society Consumerism Group cohesiveness High society Learned society Mass society Open society Outline of community Outline of culture Outline of religion Outline of society Professional association Reciprocal altruism Secret society Sociobiology Social action Social capital Social contract Social order Social system Societal collapse Structure and agencyReferences editCitations edit Meaning of society in English Cambridge Dictionary Archived 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Introduction to Macrosociology 2nd ed New York McGraw Hill Inc ISBN 978 0 07 037172 9 LCCN 73008956 OCLC 650644 Lenski Gerhard E Lenski Jean 1987 Human Societies An Introduction to Macrosociology 5th ed McGraw Hill Book Company ISBN 0 07 037181 4 LCCN 86010586 OCLC 13703170 Nolan Patrick Lenski Gerhard Emmanuel 2009 Human Societies An Introduction to Macrosociology Rev and Updated 11th ed Boulder Paradigm Publishers ISBN 978 1 59451 578 1 LCCN 2008026843 OCLC 226355644 Further reading editBicchieri Cristina Muldoon Ryan Sontuoso Alessandro 24 September 2018 Social Norms In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2018 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University ISSN 1095 5054 LCCN sn97004494 OCLC 37550526 Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Retrieved 12 January 2024 Boyd Robert Richerson Peter J 12 November 2009 Culture and the evolution of human cooperation Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 364 1533 3281 3288 doi 10 1098 rstb 2009 0134 LCCN 86645785 OCLC 1403239 PMC 2781880 PMID 19805434 Calhoun Craig ed 2002 Dictionary of the Social Sciences New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512371 9 LCCN 00068151 OCLC 45505995 Clutton Brock T West S Ratnieks F Foley R 12 November 2009 The evolution of society Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 364 1533 3127 3133 doi 10 1098 rstb 2009 0207 LCCN 86645785 OCLC 1403239 PMC 2781882 PMID 19805421 Griffen Leonid 2021 The Society as a Superorganism PDF The Scientific Heritage 5 67 51 60 ISSN 9215 0365 Archived PDF from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 12 January 2024 Jenkins Richard 2002 Foundations of Sociology Towards a Better Understanding of the Human World London UK Palgrave MacMillan ISBN 978 0 333 96050 9 LCCN 2002071539 OCLC 49859950 Lenski Gerhard 1966 Agrarian Societies Parts I amp II Power and Privilege A Theory of Social Stratification McGraw Hill Book Company pp 189 296 ISBN 0 07 037165 2 LCCN 65028594 OCLC 262063 Postone Moishe 1993 Time Labour and Social Domination A Reinterpretation of Marx s Critical Theory United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56540 0 LCCN 92035758 OCLC 26853972 Rummel Ruldolph Joseph 1976 The State Political System and Society Understanding Conflict and War Vol 2 The Conflict Helix SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 470 15123 5 LCCN 74078565 OCLC 59238703 Archived from the original on 21 March 2022 Retrieved 12 January 2024 Williams Raymond 1976 Keywords A Vocabulary of Culture and Society London UK Fontana Croom Helm ISBN 0 85664 289 4 LCCN 76377757 OCLC 2176518 Society at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Society amp oldid 1216617606 Types, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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