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HERBERT SPENCER (1820 -1903)

HERBERT SPENCER (1820 -1903). By Dr. F. Elwell. MATERIALISM. "THE AVERAGE OPINION IN EVERY AGE AND COUNTRY IS A FUNCTION OF THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE IN THAT AGE AND COUNTRY.". EVOLUTION. SPENCER'S FIRST AND FOREMOST CONCERN WAS WITH EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES IN SOCIAL STRUCTURES.

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HERBERT SPENCER (1820 -1903)

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  1. HERBERT SPENCER (1820 -1903) By Dr. F. Elwell

  2. MATERIALISM "THE AVERAGE OPINION IN EVERY AGE AND COUNTRY IS A FUNCTION OF THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE IN THAT AGE AND COUNTRY."

  3. EVOLUTION SPENCER'S FIRST AND FOREMOST CONCERN WAS WITH EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES IN SOCIAL STRUCTURES.

  4. EVOLUTION EVOLUTION WAS A UNIVERSAL PROCESS, WHICH EXPLAINS BOTH THE "EARLIEST CHANGES WHICH THE UNIVERSE AT LARGE IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE UNDERGONE ...AND THOSE LATEST CHANGES WHICH WE TRACE IN SOCIETY AND THE PRODUCTS OF SOCIAL LIFE."

  5. EVOLUTION THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN SOCIETIES IS BUT A SPECIAL CASE OF A UNIVERSALLY APPLICABLE NATURAL LAW.

  6. EVOLUTION "THERE CAN BE NO COMPLETE ACCEPTANCE OF SOCIOLOGY AS A SCIENCE SO LONG AS THE BELIEF IN A SOCIAL ORDER NOT CONFORMING TO NATURAL LAW SURVIVES."

  7. EVOLUTION SPENCER DOES NOT CLAIM THAT SOCIAL EVOLUTION “PARALLELS” OR HAS “MUCH IN COMMON” WITH ORGANIC EVOLUTION. RATHER, HE CLAIMS THAT SOCIAL EVOLUTION IS AN EXTENSION OF ORGANIC EVOLUTIONARY PRINCIPLES.

  8. EVOLUTION INCREASES IN SIZE, SPENCER MAINTAINS, BRING IN THEIR WAKE INCREASES IN DIFFERENTIATION IN STRUCTURE.

  9. EVOLUTION IF AARDVARKS WERE SUDDENLY TO GROW TO THE SIZE OF ELEPHANTS, ONLY MAJOR MODIFICATIONS IN THEIR BODY STRUCTURE WOULD ALLOW THEM TO CONTINUE BEING VIABLE ORGANISMS.

  10. EVOLUTION

  11. EVOLUTION IF HUNTING AND GATHERING SOCIETIES WERE SUDDENLY TO GROW IN POPULATION INTO THE THOUSANDS, ONLY MAJOR MODIFICATIONS IN THEIR STRUCTURES WOULD ALLOW THEM TO CONTINUE BEING VIABLE SOCIETIES.

  12. Evolution

  13. DIFFERENTIATION "SOCIETIES, LIKE LIVING BODIES, BEGIN AS GERMS--ORIGNIATE FROM MASSES WHICH ARE EXTREMELY MINUTE IN COMPARISON WITH THE MASSES SOME OF THEM EVENTUALLY REACH."

  14. DIFFERENTIATION INCREASES IN THE SIZE OF UNITS ARE INVARIABLY ACCOMPANIED BY AN INCREASE IN THE COMPLEXITY OF THEIR STRUCTURE.

  15. DIFFERENTIATION "IT INEVITABLY HAPPENS THAT IN THE BODY POLITIC, AS IN THE LIVING BODY, THERE ARISES A REGULATING SYSTEM...

  16. DIFFERENTIATION "...THERE ARISE SUPREME REGULATING CENTERS AND SUBORDINATE ONES AND THE SUPREME CENTERS BEGIN TO ENLARGE AND COMPLICATE."

  17. SOCIAL EVOLUTION SPENCER PICTURES THE PROCESS OF EVOLUTION AS ALMOST UNRELENTING, AND EVER PRESENT.

  18. SOCIAL EVOLUTION "A SOCIAL ORGANISM, LIKE AN INDIVIDUAL, UNDERGOES MODIFICATION UNTIL IT COMES INTO EQUILIBRIUM WITH ENVIRONING CONDITIONS; AND THEREUPON CONTINUES WITHOUT FURTHER CHANGE OF STRUCTURE."

  19. SOCIAL EVOLUTION ONCE EQUILIBRIUM HAS BEEN REACHED, EVOLUTION CONTINUES "TO SHOW ITSELF ONLY IN THE PROGRESSING INTEGRATION THAT ENDS IN RIGIDITY (AND) PRACTICALLY CEASES."

  20. SOCIAL EVOLUTION "LIKE OTHER KINDS OF PROGRESS, SOCIAL PROGRESS IS NOT LINEAR BUT DIVERGENT AND REDIVERGENT..."

  21. SOCIAL EVOLUTION "WHILE SPREADING OVER THE EARTH MANKIND HAVE FOUND ENVIRONMENTS OF VARIOUS CHARACTERS, AND IN EACH CASE THE SOCIAL LIFE FALLEN INTO, PARTLY DETERMINED BY THE SOCIAL LIFE PREVIOUSLY LED, HAS BEEN PARTLY DETERMINED BY THE INFLUENCES OF THE NEW ENVIRONMENT."

  22. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES TO DISTINGUISH BETWEEN WHAT HE CALLED MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES, SPENCER USED AS THE BASIS A DIFFERENCE IN SOCIAL REGULATION.

  23. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES RATHER THAN ON RELATIONS TO THE BIO-PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT, THIS CLASSIFICATION IS ROOTED IN A HYPOTHESIS THAT SOCIAL STRUCTURE IS ALSO AFFECTED BY THE RELATION OF A SOCIETY TO OTHER SOCIETIES.

  24. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES WITH PEACEFUL RELATIONS WITH NEIGHBORS COME RELATIVELY WEAK AND DIFFUSE SYSTEMS OF INTERNAL REGULATIONS; WITH HOSTILE RELATIONS COME COERCIVE AND CENTRALIZED INTERNAL CONTROLS.

  25. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES THE CHARACTERISITIC TRAIT OF MILITANT SOCIETIES IS COMPULSION, THE INDUSTRIAL TYPE OF SOCIETY, IN CONTRAST, IS BASED ON VOLUNTARY COOPERATION.

  26. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES THE MILITANT-INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION LED HIM TO A MORE PESSIMISTIC VIEW OF THE FUTURE OF MANKIND.

  27. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES "IF WE CONTRAST THE PERIOD FROM 1815 TO 1850 WITH THE PERIOD FROM 1850 TO THE PRESENT TIME, WE CANNOT FAIL TO SEE THAT ALL ALONG WITH INCREASED ARMAMENTS, MORE FREQUENT CONFLICTS, AND REVIVED MILITARY SENTIMENT, THERE HAS BEEN A SPREAD OF COMPULSORY REGULATIONS...

  28. MILITANT AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES "THE FREEDOM OF INDIVIDUALS HAS BEEN IN MANY WAYS ACTUALLY DIMINISHED ...AND UNDENIABLY THIS IS A RETURN TOWARDS THE COERCIVE DISCIPLINE WHICH PERVADES THE WHOLE SOCIAL LIFE WHERE THE MILITANT TYPE IS PRE-EMINENT."

  29. ETHNOCENTRISM HE WARNED AGAINST THE COMMON ERROR (IN HIS DAY AS WELL AS IN OURS) OF REGARDING CUSTOMS THAT APPEARED STRANGE AND REPUGNANT BY CONTEMPORARY STANDARDS OF BEING OF NO VALUE TO PARTICULAR SOCIETIES.

  30. FUNCTIONALISM MUCH OF SPENCER'S DISCUSSION OF SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR CHANGES IS EXPRESSED IN FUNCTIONAL TERMS.

  31. FUNCTIONALISM AS SOCIOLOGISTS, SPENCER URGES US TO STUDY INSTITUTIONS UNDER THE DOUBLE ASPECT OF THEIR EVOLUTIONARY STAGE AND OF THE FUNCTIONS THEY SERVE AT THAT STAGE.

  32. NONINTERVENTION WHILE COMTE STRESSED THAT MEN SHOULD AIM AT DISCOVERING THE LAWS OF SOCIETY IN ORDER TO ACT COLLECTIVELY IN THE SOCIAL WORLD, SPENCER ARGUED WITH EQUAL CONVICTION THAT WE SHOULD NOT ACT COLLECTIVELY.

  33. NONINTERVENTION IN CONTRAST TO COMTE, WHO WANTED TO DIRECT SOCIETY THROUGH THE POWER OF HIS SOCIOLOGIST-PRIESTS, SPENCER ARGUED PASSIONATELY THAT SOCIOLOGISTS SHOULD CONVINCE THE PUBLIC THAT SOCIETY MUST BE FREE FROM THE MEDDLING OF GOVERNMENTS AND REFORMERS.

  34. NONINTERVENTION "AS I HEARD REMARKED BY A DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR, WHEN ONCE YOU BEGIN TO INTERFERE WITH THE ORDER OF NATURE THERE IS NO KNOWING WHERE THE RESULT WILL END...

  35. NONINTERVENTION "AND IF THIS IS TRUE OF THAT SUB-HUMAN ORDER OF NATURE TO WHICH HE REFERRED, STILL MORE IS IT TRUE OF THAT ORDER OF NATURE EXISTING IN THE SOCIAL ARRANGEMENTS OF HUMAN BEINGS."

  36. NONINTERVENTION THE STATE HAD “THE DUTY NOT ONLY OF SHIELDING EACH CITIZEN FROM THE TRESPASSES OF HIS NEIGHBORS, BUT OF DEFENDING HIM, IN COMMON WITH THE COMMUNITY AT LARGE, AGAINST FOREIGN AGGRESSION.”

  37. NONINTERVENTION A GOOD SOCIETY, IN SPENCER'S VIEW, IS BASED ON CONTRACTS BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS PURSUING THEIR RESPECTIVE INTERESTS.

  38. NONINTERVENTION WHENEVER THE STATE INTERVENES, WHETHER FOR REASONS OF SOCIAL WELFARE OR ANY OTHER, IT LEADS TO A RETROGRESSION FROM A FREE SOCIETY TO TYRANNY.

  39. NONINTERVENTION STATE INTERVENTION ALSO LEADS TO A DISTORTION OF THE SOCIAL ORDER.

  40. POPULATION SPENCER ARGUED THAT AN EXCESS OF FERTILITY STIMULATES GREATER ACTIVITY BECAUSE THE MORE PEOPLE THERE ARE, THE MORE INGENUITY IS REQUIRED TO STAY ALIVE.

  41. POPULATION THE LEAST INTELLIGENT PEOPLE DIE OFF; HENCE, THE GENERAL LEVEL OF INTELLIGENCE IS BOUND TO RISE GRADUALLY OVER TIME.

  42. NONINTERVENTION BUT THIS BENEFICIAL EVOLUTIONARY MECHANISM WILL BE FATALLY UPSET ONCE GOVERNMENTAL INTERVENTION IN THE FORM OF SOCIAL WELFARE IS ALLOWED TO DISTORT NATURAL SELECTION.

  43. NONINTERVENTION THE INTERVENTION OF GOVERNMENT IN SOCIAL AFFAIRS MUST DISTORT THE NECESSARY ADAPTATION OF SOCIETY TO ITS ENVIRONMENT.

  44. NONINTERVENTION SPENCER WAS NOT A CRUEL, HEARTLESS, REACTIONARY WHO ENJOYED HUMAN SUFFERING. RATHER, HE WAS A MAN WHO SAW SOCIETIES AS SYSTEMS AND FEARED THE CONSEQUENCES OF DISRUPTING THOSE SYSTEMS.

  45. SYSTEMS THEORY THE EFFECTS OF ANY SIZABLE INTERVENTION IN A SOCIAL SYSTEM, OR IN AN ECOSYTEM, ARE LIKE RIPPLES SPREADING OUT ON A POND FROM A DROPPED PEBBLE; THEY GO ON AND ON.

  46. SYSTEMS THEORY IT IS BECOMING CLEAR THAT IF YOU KEEP EVERYTHING IN MIND—THAT IS, IF YOU THINK IN TERMS OF A SYSTEM—THE IMAGE OF A CHAIN DOES NOT SUFFICE;

  47. SYSTEMS THEORY YOUR MIND MUST MOVE ON TO A NETWORK OR WEB, IN THREE DIMENSIONS (FOUR IF YOU INCLUDE, AS YOU MUST, THE DIMENSION OF TIME).

  48. SYSTEMS THEORY FINALLY, VARIOUS SYSTEMS (THE ECOLOGICAL, SOCIAL, PHYSIOLOGICAL) INTERACT WITH ONE ANOTHER. WHILE SUCH VISUALIZATION IS CERTAINLY MORE DIFFICULT THAN SIMPLE CAUSALITY, IT IS PROBABLY A MUCH MORE ACCURATE REFLECTION OF COMPLEX REALITY.

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