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Durkheim'sdivision of labor in society
Authors:Robert K. Merton
Affiliation:(1) Department of Sociology, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract:The source of social life, according to Durkheim, is the similitude of consciousnesses and the division of labor. The former is best evident among primitive societies where a ldquomechanical solidarity,rdquo evidenced by repressive law, prevails; the latter in advanced societies where populations evidence greater ldquodynamic density,rdquo and juridical rules define the nature and relations of functions. In combating individualism and basing the existence of societies on a ldquoconsensus of parts,rdquo Durkheim refutes his positivistic emphasis which denies the relevance of ends to a scientific study of society. In his discussion of social ends is a latent anti-mechanistic trend. The theory of unilinear development is established on deficient ethnographic data. It assumes the absence of division of labor among primitive societies and of any ldquomechanical solidarityrdquo among modern societies. Repressive and restitutive law Durkheim seeks to use as indexes of mechanical and organic solidarity, but he does not establish with any precision the perfect associations which he assumes obtain between his types of solidarity and of law.Reproduced from theAmerican Journal of Sociology, Vol. 40 (1934), pp. 319–328. (© 1934 by the University of Chicago. All rights reserved.)
Keywords:solidarity  positivism  structural correlates  dynamic density
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