Top 5 Theories of Social Change - Explained

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Top5TheoriesofSocialChangeExplained

Top 5 Theories of Social


Change Explained
byPujaMondalSociology

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The five theories of social change are as follows: 1.


Evolutionary Theory 2. Cyclical Theory 3. Economic
(Mandan) Theory of Social Change 4. Conflict Theory 5.
Technological Theory.
A variety of reasons have been offered throughout
history to explain why social change occurs. The
problem of explaining social change was central to
nineteenth century sociology. Many earlier theories of
society that claimed to be scientific were in fact theories
of change. They sought to explain the present in terms of
the past. Auguste Comte, the French sociologist, who
coined the term sociology described society as starting
from the logical stage, passing through a metaphysical
stage and finally reaching a positivistic stage.

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Many different theories were propounded to define and


explain social change. Broadly, theories of nineteenth
century may be divided into theories of social evolution
(Saint-Simon, Comte, Spencer, Durkheim etc.) and
theories of social revolution (Marx).
Among the general theoretical explanations offered for
under
standing social change are geographical,
biological, economic and cultural. All these we have
discussed in the previous section.
Theories of social change can be divided into two
groups:
(1) Theories relating to the direction of social change:
Various types of evolutionary theories, and cyclical
theory.
(2) Theories relating to causation of change:
(a) Those explaining change in terms of endogamous
factors or processes; and
(b) Those emphasising exogamous factors such as
economic, cultural or historical.

1.EvolutionaryTheory:
Despite the wide variety in the possible directions
change may take, various generalisations have been set
forth. Because the lot of mankind generally has
improved over the long term, by far the most numerous
classes of theories of the direction of change comprise
various cumulative or evolutionary trends. Though
varying in many ways, these theories share an
important conclusion that the course of mans history is
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marked up upward trend through time.


The notion of evolution came into social sciences from
the theories of biological evolution. With the advent of
Darwinian Theory of biological evolution, society and
culture began to be regarded as undergoing the same
changes and demonstrating the same trends.
It was conceived that society and culture were subject to
the same general laws of biological and organism
growth. Some thinkers even identified evolution with
progress and proceeded to project into the future more
and more perfect and better-adapted social and cultural
forms.
Charles Darwin (1859), the British biologist, who
propounded the theory of biological evolution, showed
that species of organisms have evolved from simpler
organisms to the more complicated organisms through
the processes of variations and natural selection. After
Darwin, evolution, in fact, became the buzz word in all
intellectual inquiry and Darwin and Spencer were the
key names of an era in the history of thought.
Herbert Spencer (1890), who is known to be the
forerunner of this evolutionary thought in sociology,
took the position that sociology is the study of evolution
in its most complex form. For him, evolution is a
process of differen
tiation and integration.
Bask Assumptions And Distinctive Features Of The
Evolutionary Chang:
The basic assumption of this theory is that change is the
characteristic feature of human society. The present
observed condition of the society is presumed to be the
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result of change in the past. Another assumption is that


change is inevitable or it is natural.
It was assumed that the change is basically the result of
operation of forces within the society or culture.
Underlying all theories of evolution, there exists a belief
of infinite improvement in the next stage over the
preceding one.
All these assumptions can be summarised as under:
1. That change is inevitable and natural.
2. That change is gradual and continuous.
3. That change is sequential and in certain stages.
4. That all successive stages of change are higher over
preceding stage, i.e., evolution is progressive.
5. That stages of change are non-reversible.
6. That forces of change are inherent in the object.
7. That the direction of change is from simple to
complex, from homogeneity to heterogeneity, from
undifferentiated to the differentiated in form and
function.
8. That all societies pass through same stages of
development.
All thinking of early sociologists was dominated by a
conception of man and society as seen progressing up
definite steps of evolution leading through every greater
complexity to some final stage of perfection. The notion
of evolutionary principles was extremely popular with
British anthropologists and sociologists of nineteenth
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century.
Such as Morgan (1877), Tyler (1889), Spencer (1890) and
Hobhouse (1906). Although evolutionary theory in
sociology is attributed to Herbert Spencer, it is clear that
it was taken for granted by writers as diverse as Emile
Durkheim, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and V. Gordon
Childe.
The fact that it was used by both radical and
conservative theorists is indicative of the profound
cultural impor
tance of evolutionism in the nineteenth
century thought. The conception of evolution was
applied not only to the development of societies but also
to art, literature, music, philosophy, sciences, religion,
economic and political life (state) and almost every other
achievement of the mind of man. Both Spencer and
Durkheim employed the concept of structural
differentiation to indicate that as society develops more
functions, it becomes structurally more complex. This
perspective has been elaborated more recently by
Talcott Parsons.
The general evolutionary model of society is represented
by a large number of specific theories. C.H. Saint-Simon,
one of the earliest founders of sociology, along with
Auguste Comte, for example, put an evolutionary idea of
social development, as a sequential progression of
organic societies representing increasing levels of
advancement.
His three stages were later elaborated in Comtes
evolutionary scheme. Comte linked developments in
human knowledge, culture and society and delineated
the following three great stages through which all
societies must gothose of conquest, defense and
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industry. Societies passed through three stagesthe


primitive, the intermediary and the scientific, which
corresponded to the forms of human knowledge
(thought).
He conceived these stages as progressing from the
theological through the metaphysical to arrive
ultimately at the perfection of positive reasoning. He
argued all mankind inevitably passed through these
stages as it developed, suggesting both unilinear
direction and progress. Spencer also displayed a linear
concept of evolutionary stages. He argued that the trend
of human societies was from simple, undifferentiated
wholes to complex and heterogeneous ones, where the
parts of the whole become more specialised but
remained integrated.
William Graham Sumner (1934), who has been labelled
as a Social Darwinist also used the idea of evolution, as
had Spencer, to block efforts at reform and social
change, arguing that social evolution must follow its
own course, dictated by nature. He said: It is the
greatest folly of which a man can be capable, to sit down
with a slate and pencil to plan out a new social world.
The evolutionary approach to social development was
also followed by radical thinkers, such as Marx and
Engels, who were greatly influenced by the work of the
anthropologist L.H. Morgan, who sought to prove that all
societies went through fixed stages of development each
succeeding the other, from savagery through barbarism
to civilisation. Marx and Engels maintained that each
stage of civilisation, such as feudalism, prepared the
ground for the next.
It contained within itself the seeds of its own
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destruction, and would inevitably be succeeded by that


stage next higher on the scale of evolution. On this
basis they concluded that the next stage in social
evolution after the stage of capitalism could be attained
only by violent revolution. All these theories are
referred to as unilinear theories of social evolution.
Durkheims view of the progressive division of labour in
society and German sociologist Ferdinand Tonnies view
of gemeinschaft and gesellschaft types of society to some
extent also represent the evolu
tionary perspective but
their schemes of classifying societies are less sweeping
and less explicit, and are, therefore referred to as quasievolutionary theories. For Durkheim the most important
dimension of society was the degree of specialisation, as
he called it, the division of labour.
He believed that there was a historical trend, or
evolution, from a low to a high degree of specialisation.
Durkheim distinguished two main types of society on the
basis of this division of labourthe first based on
mechanical solidarity and the second on organic
solidarity. Durkheim believed that this second type
always evolved from and succeeded the first as the
degree of specialisation, the division of labour,
increased.
Tonnies gemeinschaft type of society corresponded
quite well to Durkheims mechanical solidarity and the
second gesellschaft to organic solidarity. Numerous
other scholars put forth similar ideas. The scheme of the
American anthro
pologist Robert Redfield, who
elaborated on the contrast between folk and urban
society, reiterates the same basic dichotomy of social
types suggested by Durkheim and Tonnies. Modem
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theorist Talcott Parsons also viewed social change as a


process of social evolution from simple to more
complex form of society. He regards changes in
adaptation as a major driving force of social evolution.
The history of human society from simple hunting and
gathering band to the complex nation-state represents
an increase in the general adaptive capacity of society.

TypesofEvolutionaryTheory:
There are three main types of evolutionary theory:
(1) Theory of Unilinear Evolution:
It postulates the straight-line, ordered or progressive
nature of social change. According to this theory, change
always proceeds toward a predestined goal in a
unilinear fashion. There is no place of repetition of the
same stage in this theory. Followers of this pattern of
change argue that society gradually moves to an even
higher state of civili
sation which advances in a linear
fashion and in the direction of improvement. The pace
of this change may be swift or slow. In brief, linear
hypothesis states that all aspects of society change
continually in a certain direction, never faltering, never
repeating themselves.
Theories of Saint-Simon, Comte, Morgan, Marx and
Engels, and many other anthropologists and sociologists
come under the category of unilinear theories of social
evolution because they are based on the assumption that
each society does, indeed must, pass through a fixed and
limited numbers of stages in a given sequence. Such
theories long dominated the sociological scene.
(2) Universal Theory of Evolution:

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It is a little bit variant form of unilinear evolution which


states that every society does not necessarily go through
the same fixed stages of development. It argues, rather,
that the culture of mankind, taken as a whole, has
followed a definite line of evolution.
Spencers views can be categorised under this
perspective who said that mankind had progressed from
small groups to large and from simple to compound and
in more general terms, from homogenous to the
heterogeneous. The anthropologist Leslie White has
been a leading exponent of this conception.
Similar ideas were greatly elaborated by William
Ogbum, who stressed the role of invention in social
change. On this basis he gave birth to the famous
concept of cultural lag which states that change in our
non-material culture, i.e., in our ideas and social
arrangements, always lag behind changes in material
culture, i.e., in our technology and invention.
(3) Multilinear Theory of Evolution:
This brand of evolutionism has more recently developed
and is more realistic than the unilinear and universal
brand of evolutionary change. Multilinear evolution is a
concept, which attempts to account for diversity. It
essentially means identification of different sequential
patterns for different culture or types of cultures. This
theory holds that change can occur in several ways and
that it does not inevitably lead in the same direction.
Theorists of this persuasion recognise that human
culture has evolved along a number of lines.
Those who share this perspective, such as Julian Steward
(1960), attempt to explain neither the straight-line
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evolution of each society, nor the progress of mankind


as a whole, but rather concentrate on much more
limited sequences of development.
It does identify some social trends as merely universal:
the progression from smaller to larger, simpler to more
complex, rural to urban, and low technology to higher
technology but it recognises that these can come about
in various ways and with distinct consequences. This
theory is related to what is known as episodic approach,
which stresses the importance of accidents and unique
historical, social and environmental circumstances that
help to explain a particular course of social change.
Later on, the views of Leslie White and Julian Steward
were named as neo-evolutionism.

CriticismofEvolutionaryTheory:
Evolutionary scheme (gradual and continuous
development in stages) of any kind fell under both
theoretical and empirical attack in the last century. It
was criticised heavily on many grounds but mainly for
its sweeping or over-generalisation about historical
sequences, uniform stages of development and
evolutionary rate of change. The biological evolution,
from which the main ideas of social evolution were
borrowed, provided somewhat clumsy and
unsatisfactory answers.
Such explanations came under attack for lack of
evidence. Evolutionary scales were also questioned from
a somewhat different, but more empirical source. The
easy assumption that societies evolved from simple to
complex forms, was mainly based on a scale of
predominant productive technology turned out to be
unwarranted.
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The doctrine of cultural relativity inhibited even static


or cross-sectional generalisation, provided a new basis
for satisfying the common features of societies. The
evolutionary scheme also failed to specify the systematic
characteristics of evolving societies or institu
tions and
also the mechanisms and processes of change through
which the transition from one stage to another was
effected.
Most of the classical evolutionary schools tended to
point out general causes of change (economic,
technological or spiritual etc.) or some general trend to
complexity inherent in the development of societies.
Very often they confused such general tendencies with
the causes of change or assumed that the general
tendencies explain concrete instances of change.
Because of the above shortcomings, the evolutionary
theory is less popular today. A leading modern theorist
Anthony Giddens (1979) has consistently attacked on
evolutionism and functionalism of any brand. He rejects
them as an appropriate approach to under
standing
society and social change. Spencers optimistic theory is
regarded with some skepticism. It is said that growth
may create social problems rather than social progress.
Modern sociology has tended to neglect or even to reject
this theory, mainly because it was too uncritically
applied by an earlier generation of sociologists. In spite
of its all weaknesses, it has a very significant place in the
inter
pretation of social change. The recent tentative
revival in an evolutionary perspective is closely related
to growing interest in historical and comparative
studies.

2.CyclicalTheory:
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Cyclical change is a variation on unilinear theory which


was developed by Oswald Spengler (Decline of the West,
1918) and Arnold J. Toynbee (A Study of History, 1956).
They argued that societies and civilisations change
according to cycles of rise, decline and fall just as
individual persons are born, mature, grow old, and die.
According to German thinker Spengler, every society has
a predetermined life cyclebirth, growth, maturity and
decline. Society, after passing through all these stages of
life cycle, returns to the original stage and thus the cycle
begins again.
On the basis of his analysis of Egyptian, Greek Roman
and many other civilisations, he concluded that the
Western civilisation is now on its decline. The world
renowned British historian Toyanbee has also upheld
this theory. He has studied the history of various
civilisations and has found that every civili
sation has its
rise, development and fall such as the civilisation of
Egypt. They have all come and gone, repeating a
recurrent cycle of birth, growth, breakdown and decay.
He propounded the theory of challenge and response
which means that those who can cope with a changing
environment survive and those who cannot die.
Thus, a society can grow and survive if it can
constructively respond to the challenges. Cyclical theory
of change or sometimes called rise and fair theory
presumes that social phenomena of whatever sort recur
again and again, exactly as they were before in a cyclical
fashion.
A variant of cyclical process is the theory of a wellknown American sociologist P.A. Sorokin (Social and
Cultural Dynamics, 1941), which is known as pendular
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theory of social change. He considers the course of


history to be continuous, though irregular, fluctuating
between two basic kinds of cultures: the sensate and
the ideational through the idealistic. According to him,
culture oscil
lates like the pendulum of a clock between
two points.
The pendulum of a clock swings with the passage of
time, but ultimately it comes to its original position and
re-proceeds to its previous journey. Thus, it is just like a
cyclical process but oscillating in character. A sensate
culture is one that appeals to the senses and sensual
desires.
It is hedonistic in its ethics and stresses science and
empir
icism. On the other hand, the ideational culture is
one in which expressions of art, literature, religion and
ethics do not appeal to the senses but to the mind or the
spirit. It is more abstract and symbolic than the sensate
culture.
The pendulum of culture swings from sensate pole and
leads towards the ideational pole through the middle
pole called idealistic culture, which is a mixed form of
sensate and ideational culturesa somewhat stable
mixture of faith, reason, and senses as the source of
truth. Sorokin places contem
porary European and
American cultures in the last stage of disintegration of
sensate culture, and argues that only way out of our
crisis is a new synthesis of faith and sensation. There is
no other possibility.
In Sorokins analysis of cultures, we find the seeds of
both the theoriescyclical and linear change. In his
view, culture may proceed in a given direction for a time
and thus appear to conform to a linear formula. But,
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eventually, as a result of forces that are inherent in the


culture itself, there will be shift of direction and a new
period of development will be ushered in. This new
trend may be linear, perhaps it is oscillating or it may
conform to some particular type of curve.
Vilfredo Paretos (1963) theory of Circulation of Elites is
also essentially of this variety. According to this theory,
major social change in society occurs when one elite
replaces another, a process Pareto calls it circulation of
elites. All elites tend to become decadent in the course
of time. They decay in quality and lose their vigour.
According to Marx, history ultimately leads to and ends
with the communist Utopia, whereas history to Pareto is
a never-ending circu
lation of elites. He said that
societies pass through the periods of political vigour and
decline which repeat themselves in a cyclical fashion.

FunctionalismandSocialChange:
Functionalism, as a new approach of study of society,
developed mainly as a reaction to evolutionism, in the
early years of twentieth century. Critics of evolutionism
advocated that there was no use to know the first
appearance of any item of culture and social behaviour.
They called it the fruitless quest for origin. One of the
most significant assumptions of functionalists is that
society (or culture) is comprised of functionally
interdependent parts or the system as a whole.
These theorists believed that the society, like human
body, is a balanced system of institutions, each of which
serves a function in maintaining society. When events
outside or inside the society disrupts the equilibrium,
social institution makes adjustments to restore stability.

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This fundamental assumption became the main basis of


the critics of functionalism to charge that if the system is
in equilibrium with its various parts contributing
towards order and stability, it is difficult to see how it
changes. Critics (mostly conflict theorists) argued that
functionists have no adequate explanation of change.
They cannot account for change, in that there appears to
be no mechanism which will disturb existing functional
relationships.
Thus, functionalists have nothing or very little to offer to
the study of social change as this approach is concerned
only about the maintenance of the system, i.e., how
social order is maintained in the society. G. Homans, in
one of his articles Bringing men back (1964) stressed
that the dominant characteristic in the functionalist
model is an inherent tendency towards stability. Society
may change, but it remains stable through new forms of
integration.
The functionalists responded to this charge by
employing concepts such as equilibrium and
differentiation. For instance, a leading proponent of
functionalist approach, Talcott Parsons approaches this
problem in the following way: He maintained, no system
is in a perfect state of equilibrium although a certain
degree of equilibrium is essential for the survival of
societies. Changes occur in one part of society, there
must be adjustments in other parts. If this does not
occur, the societys equilibrium will be disturbed and
strain will occur. The process of social change can
therefore be thought of as a moving equilibrium.
Parsons views social change as a process of social
evolution from simple to more complex form of society.
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Social evolution involves a process of social


differentiation. The institutions arid roles which form
the social system become increasingly differentiated and
specialised in terms of their function. As the parts of
society become more and more specialised and distinct,
it increases the problem of integration of parts which in
turn set forth the process of social change and social
equilibrium.
Some followers of functionalism argued that if it is a
theory of social persistence (stability), then it must be
also a theory of change. In the process of adaptation of
social institutions in a society, change is a necessary
condition or rather it is imminent in it. Thus, one can
explain changes in the economy as adaptations to other
economics or to the polity, or changes in the family
structure in terms of adaptation to other institutions,
and so on. In an article Dialectic and
Functionalism (ASR, 1963), P. Van den Berghe states
that according to functional theory change may come
from three main sources:
1. Adjustment to external disturbances such as a
recession in world trade.
2. Structural differentiation in response to problems
within the system, e.g., electoral reforms in response to
political unrest.
3. Creative innovations within the system, e.g., scientific
discov
eries or technological advances.

3.Economic(Mandan)TheoryofSocial
Change:
Owing largely to the influence of Marx and Marxism, the
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economic theory of change is also known as the Marxian


theory of change. Of course, economic interpretations of
social change need not be always Marxist, but none of
the other versions (such as Veblen who also stressed on
material and economic factor) of the doctrine are quite
as important as Marxism.
The Marxian theory rests on this funda
mental
assumption that changes in the economic infrastructure of society are the prime movers of social
change. For Marx, society consists of two structures
infra-structure and super-structure. The infrastructure consists of the forces of production and
relations of production.
The super-structure consists of those features of the
social system, such as legal, ideological, political and
religious insti
tutions, which serve to maintain the infrastructure, and which are moulded by it. To be more
clear, according to Marx, productive forces constitute
means of production (natural resources, land, labour,
raw material, machines, tools and other instruments of
production) and mode of production (techniques of
production, mental and moral habits of human beings)
both and their level of development deter
mines the
social relation of production, i.e., production relations.
These production relations (class relations) constitute
the economic structure of societythe totality of
production relations. Thus, the socio-economic structure
of society is basically determined by the state of
productive forces. For Marx, the contradiction between
the constantly changing and developing productive
forces and the stable production relations is the
demiurage of all social development or social change.
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BasicPostulates:
Change is the order of nature and society. It is inherent
in the matter through the contradiction of forces. Marx
wrote: Matter is objective reality, existing outside and
independent of the mind. The activity of the mind does
not arise independent of the material. Everything
mental or spiritual is the product of the material
process. The world, by its very nature is material.
Everything which exists comes into being on the basis of
material course, arises and develops in accor
dance with
the laws of motion of matter. Things come into being,
exist and cease to exist, not each independent of all
other things but each in its relationship with others.
Things cannot be understood each separately and by
itself but only in their relation and intercon
nections. The
world does not consist of permanent stable things with
definite properties but of unending processes of nature
in which things go through a change of coming into
being and passing away.
For Marx, production system is the lever of all social
changes, and this system is dynamic. Need system
determines production and the technological order, i.e.,
mode of production. It is mans material necessities that
are at the root of his productive effort, which in its turn
is the basics of all other forms of his life. Marx believed
that change occurs through contradiction of forces and
this is present throughout the history in some or the
other form.
In the Preface of his monumental work Capital: A
Critique of Political Economy Marxs whole philosophy
of social change is summarised: At a certain stage of
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their development, the material forces of production in


society come into conflict with the existing relations of
production or with the property relations within which
they had been at work before. From forms of
development of the forces of production these relations
turn into their fetters. Then comes the period of social
revolution with the change of the economic foundation,
the entire immense superstructure is more or less
rapidly transformed.
Thus, the main thrust of the Preface is the emphasis on
changes in the economic base (mode of production), and
these in turn produce ideologies which induce people to
fight out social struggles. As it stands, this materialist
conception of history certainly encourages us to regard
evolution of the economic base as the key to social
changewhat Engels called the law of development of
human history.
Marx viewed the course of history (social change) in
terms of the philosophy of dialectics. (An idea
borrowed from Hegel but Marx called it materialistic.
According to Hegel, evolution proceeds according to a
system of three stagesthesis, antithesis and synthesis).
Accordingly, the change, development, and progress
take place by way of contradiction and conflict and that
the resulting change leads to a higher unity.
In particular, Marx viewed the class struggle and the
transition from one social system to another as a
dialectical process in which the ruling class viewed as
thesis evoked its negation (antithesis) in the
challenger class and thus to a synthesis through
revolutionary transformation resulting in a higher
organisation of elements from the old order. In the
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dialectical point of view of change, sharp stages and


forces are abstracted out of the continuity and
gradations in the social process and then explanations
are made of the process on the basis of these stages and
forces in dialectical conflict.
Marx believed that the class struggle was the driving
force of social change. For him it was the motor of
history. He states that the history of all hitherto
existing society is the history of class struggles
(Communist Manifesto, 1848).
Society evolves from one stage to another by means of
struggle between two classesone representing the
obsolescent system of production and the other nascent
(new) order. The emerging class is ultimately victorious
in this struggle and establishes a new order of
production; within this order, in turn, are contained the
seeds of its own destructionthe dialectical process
once more. Change will only occur as a victory of the
exploited class.
Marx believed that the basic contradictions contained in
a capitalist economic system would lead to class
consciousness. Class consciousness involves a full
awareness by members of the working class of the
reality of exploitation, a recognition of common
interests, the common identification of an opposing
group with whom their interests are in conflict. This
realisation will unite them for prole
tarian revolution.
The proletariat would overthrow the bourgeoisie and
seize the forces of productionthe source of power.
Property would be communally owned. Now, all
members of society would share the same relationship
to the forces of production. A classless society would
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result. Since the history is the history of the class


struggle, history would now end.

Critique:
Marx is often charged for his deterministic attitude
toward society and its change. There is some
controversy as to whether Marx really meant to assert
that social and cultural phenomena are wholly or only
determined by economic or material conditions. His
various statements are not fully reconciled and are
susceptible of either inter
pretation. In his later writings
he has objected to the interpretation of his ideas that
makes other than economic factors purely derivative
and non-causal (Selected correspondence). But he holds
to the position that the economic situation is the
foundation of the social order and this is the gist of
Marxian theory.
Few deny that economic factor influences social
conditions of life. Its influence is certainly powerful and
penetrating. But, it cannot be regarded as a sole factor
affecting social change. There are other causes also
which are as important as the economic factor.
To say that the super-structure of society is determined
by its infra-structure, i.e., production system (economic
system) of a society is going too far. The link between the
social change and the economic process is far less direct
and simple and sufficient than the Marxian psychology
admits.
Moreover, Marx oversimplified the class structure of
society and its dynamics of social change in the form of
class struggle. Dorthy S. Thomas (1925) commented that
it is not difficult to establish correlation between social
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changes and economic changes, though it is harder to


interpret them. Thus, economic determinism does not
solve the major problem of social causation.

4.ConflictTheory:
Social theorists in the nineteenth and early twentieth
centurys were concerned with conflict in society. But,
the label of conflict theorists is generally applied to those
sociologists who opposed the dominance of structuralfunctionalism. These theorists contend that in function
alism there is no place of change and as such it cannot
explain change.
They have neglected conflict in favour of a unitary
concept of society which emphasises social integration.
By contrast to function
alist approach, conflict theorists
contend that institutions and practices continue because
powerful groups have the ability to maintain the status
quo. Change has a crucial significance, since it is needed
to correct social injustices and inequalities.
Conflict theorists do not believe that societies smoothly
evolve to higher level. Instead, they believe that
conflicting groups struggle to ensure progress (Coser,
1956). Conflict theorists assert that conflict is a necessary
condition for change. It must be the cause of change.
There is no society, changing or unchanging, which does
not have conflict of some kind or another. Thus, conflict
is associated with all types of social change in some way
or other.
The modem conflict theory is heavily influenced by the
ideas of karl Marx. It may be regarded as the offshoot of
his economic theory of social change which states that
economic change only occurs and produces other
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change through the mechanism of intensified conflict


between social groups and between different parts of
the social system. Conflict would ultimately transform
society. While Marx emphasised economic conflict. Max
Weber based his arguments on conflict about power.
Ralf Dahrendorf (1959), although critical of Marxist
notions of class, tried to reconcile the contrast between
the functionalist and conflict approaches of society.
He contends that these approaches are ultimately
compatible despite their many areas of disagreement.
He disagreed with Marx not only on the notions of class
but on many other points also. Marx viewed social
change as a resolution of conflict over scarce economic
resources, whereas Dahrendorf viewed social change as
a resolution of conflict over power. Marx believed a
grand conflict would occur between those who had
economic resources and those who did not, whereas
Dahrendorf believed that there is constant simultaneous
conflict among many segments of society.
Commenting on this theory, Percy S. Cohen (Modem
Social Theory, 1968) writes: This theory is plausible, but
it is not neces
sarily true. The contention that group
conflict is a sufficient condition for social change is
obviously false. It is arguable that structured conflict,
when it involves a fairly equal balance of forces, actually
obstructs change which might otherwise occur.
For example, in societies where there are deep divisions
between regional, ethnic or racial groups, there may be
little possibility of promoting economic development or
welfare policies; such ameliorative changes require
some degree of consensus. The simple point is that
conflict may lead to impasse not to change. It should be
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emphasised that social conflict is often as much the


product of social change as the cause. And it is
commonly a great obstacle to certain types of change.

5.TechnologicalTheory:
When the average person speaks of the changes brought
about by science, he is generally thinking of
technology and the manifold wonders wrought
thereby. The technology refers to the application of
knowledge to the making of tools and the utilisation of
natural resources (Schaefer and Lamm, 1992). It
involves the creation of material instruments (such as
machines) used in human interaction with nature. It is
not synonymous with machinery as it is understood in
common parlance. Machines are the result of the
knowledge gained by science but they themselves are
not technology.
Social change takes place due to the working of many
factors. Technology is not only one of them but an
important factor of social change. When it is said that
almost whole of human civilisation is the product of
technological development, it only means that any
change in technology would initiate a corresponding
change in the arrangement of social relationships.
It is believed that Marx has attached great importance to
technology in his scheme of mode of production, which
forms the main basis for the change in society. For Marx,
the stage of technological development determines the
mode of production and the relationships and the
institutions that constitute the economic system. This set
of relationships is in turn the chief determinant of the
whole social order.

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Technological development creates new conditions of


life which forces new conditions in adaptation. W.F.
Ogbum, in his article, How Technology Changes Society
(1947), writes: Technology changes by changing our
environment to which we, in turn, adapt. This change is
usually in the material environment, and the adjustment
we make to the changes often modifies customs and
social institutions. Anthro
pologist Leslie White (Science
and Culture, 1949) held that technology, particularly the
amount of energy harnessed and the way in which it is
used, determines the forms and content of culture and
society. Technology affects directly and indirectly both.
Certain social consequences are the direct result of
mechanisation, such as new organisation of labour,
destruction of domestic system of production, the
expansion of the range of social contacts, the speciali
sation of function etc. Its indirect consequences are the
increase of unemployment, the heightening of
competition etc. Conflict between the states, as they
strive for dominance, security or better prospects are
the result of competition.
The invention of wheel, compass, gunpowder, steam
engine, printing press, telephone (now mobile phone),
radio, TV, internet, aeroplane, motor car and so many
other inventions in medical and other fields have
revolutionised the human life. Advances in agricul
tural
technology, ranging from the iron-tipped plow to the
tractor technology and the three-crop rotation system
made possible the creation of a surplus. One of the
earliest books on social change written by W.F. Ogbum
(1922) has analysed such changes in detail.
He has narrated about 150 such changes (both
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immediate and distant social effects) in social life


brought about by the invention of radio alone. Ogbum
gives many illustrations of this kind. He suggests, for
example, that the invention of the self-starter on
automobiles had something to do with the emancipation
of women. The self-starter gave them freedom of a kind.
Similarly, many labour saving devices in the home have
also contributed to the emancipation of women.
In this connection, Ogbum and Nimkoff (1958) argue:
An important invention need not be limited to only a
single social effect. Sometimes it exerts many influences
which spread out in different directions like the spokes
of a wheel. Technological developments have affected a
lot of changes in attitudes, beliefs and even in tradi
tions.
These influence almost all aspects of our life and culture.
These include social customs and practical techniques
for converting raw material to finished products.
The production and use of food, shelter, clothing and
commodities, physical structures, and fabrics all are also
aspects of societys technology. The most important
aspect of technology in that a man thinks rationally and
objectively about things and events. Man has become
more pragmatic in his outlook. He is more disciplined
(time-oriented) in his working habits. New forms of
transportation and communication, which have
contributed to significant changes in social life, are all
due to the change in technology.
There is a greater mobility of population today than that
was in the nineteenth or twentieth century because of
the modem rapid means of transport. The life of the
modem man is always on wheels. It is an important
factor in the determination of spatial aspect of social
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relationships. Changes in communication devices (email, internet, mobile phones etc.) have also influenced
all aspects of social life (work, leisure, family, friendship,
sports etc.) enormously. The basic function of all
communication and transportation devices is the
conquest of time and space. Shrinking space and time
through the speed and low cost of electronic
communication and air travel has developed a new
phenomenon called globalisation.
Any technological change which is great enough will
produce some other social change as a consequence
(Cohen, 1968). This is summum bonum (gist) of this
theory. For example, new techniques of manufacture
are found to affect social relations in the relevant
industry. A single invention of geared wheel has
produced thousands of inventions which in turn
affected social relations enormously. The automobile
has brought number of social changes which have
altered individual lifestyles. Computers and the Internet
are the latest of a long line of developments to prompt
Utopian and anti-utopian visions of a world transformed
by technology.
Computers have affected almost all aspects of our life
from reservations at the railway ticket window or
registration for hospitals or colleges to the maintenance
of accounts in banks and large business corporations.
The popularity of science fiction (Harry Potter) and the
films like Jurrasic Park are other indicators of the
mythical and abundant power which technology can
have in the modem world.
Modern technology has also revolutionised the concept
and quality of the systems of production,
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communication, social organisation and various


processes of acculturation and symbolisation in
societies. Technology helps in realising of our goals with
less effort, less cost and with greater efficiency.
Technology creates desire for novelty and innovation.
Novelty is sought everywhere and transient interests
give a corresponding character to social relationships.
Technology has advanced in leaps and bounds over the
last 25 years and the single invention that has had to
greatest impact on our lives is the cell phone. It is now
not only used as a means of communi
cation but it has
enabled us to operate home appliances and
entertainment devices, monitor our homes safety,
customise our internal home environment.
In the light of these technical advances the
anthropologist Peter Worsly (1984) was actuated to
comment, until our day, human society has never
existed, meaning that it is only in quite recent times
that we can speak of forms of social association which
span the earth. The world has become in important
respects a single social system as a growing ties of
interdependence which now affect virtually everyone.
The idea of global village developed by Marshall
McLuban (1960) reflects that the world is becoming
more integrated in economic, political and cultural
terms.

Critique:
The goals and consequences of technology and the
production of material goods are being seriously
questioned today. Does a high level of technology
increase happiness and improve our family life? Do
complex technologies bring us clean air, pure water and
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help us conserve natural resources? Do we not think


that the rapidly changing technology is the cause of our
all types of environmental degradation, pollution, health
and social problems? People do not hesitate to say that
modem technology (science) is responsible for moral
degradation of our society. Medical advances that
prolong life, for example, may surpass our ability for
elderly or an honourable life for them. Technical
advances have often been portrayed as routes to heaven
or hella source of deliverance of damnation.
Every new factor, whether it is a creed or a machine,
disturbs an old adjustment. The disturbance created by
mechanism was so great that it seemed the enemy of
culture. The wealth-bringing technology brought also
ugliness, shoddiness, and haste standardisation. It
brought new hazards, new diseases and fatigue. That
was not the fault of the technology (machines). It was
due to the ruthlessness and greed of those who
controlled these great inventions. But human values
started reasserting themselves against all types of
exploitation (economic, ecological or social).
Though technology is an important factor of change, it
does not mean that technological change alone can
produce social changes of all types. Nor technological
change always a necessary condition for other social
changes. It may be that certain technological conditions
are necessary before other factors can produce certain
changes, but these need not precipitate social change.
For instance, it required no change in technology to
bring about a democratic society in India. Moreover,
culture in turn seeks to direct technology to its own
ends. Man may be master as well as the slave of the
machine. Man is a critic as well as a creature of
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