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Social Structures and the Power of the State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 July 2024
Extract
The simplest and no doubt the most persistent of the ideas held on the relationship between society and power, from Menenius Agrippa to Auguste Comte, is that of an analogy between the social body and the human body. Both these men deduced that power is nothing other than the supreme regulating function of all functional activities, as harmoniously integrated in society as they are in human physiology. Ethnographic study often strengthened this organicist conception through description of the various social functions as necessary or vital for the cohesion and the existence of primitive society. But historic societies provide a spectacle quite different from that of an integrated organism. In them social functions are not abstractions but are seen rather in the form of human groups whose relationships can scarcely be said to show an organic solidarity. Within these groups and working to set them against each other, powers have their own interests which they must protect against the inroads of ambitions. The permanence of certain functions (military, religious, and economic, for example) does not imply permanence in the structures which implement them or in the real or fictional power which accompanies them. Their meaning is ambivalent. Obviously, they contribute to the architecture of a society; they may have a latent content which is a disintegrating factor from the moment when their hierarchy no longer suits the changing stratifications of the social body.
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- Copyright © 1958 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)
References
1. Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy (2d ed.; New York and London: Harper & Bros., 1947) (p. 77 of the French edition).
2. Karl Kautsky in Neue Zeit, No. 3 (October, 1901).
3. The Journal des débats gave this term all its meanings when it wrote just after the events of Lyon: "The barbarians who threaten society are not in the Caucasus nor in the steppes of central Asia, they are to be found in the suburbs of our manufacturing cities" (December 8, 1831); quoted by F. Rude in Le Mouvement ouvrier à Lyon.
4. The Communist Manifesto. On this subject the statement of a minister of Louis-Philippe to the Chamber of Deputies may be quoted: "The state must reserve for itself all chances of ruin in order to preserve the companies from it."
5. De la propriété (Paris: Paulin, Lheureux et Cie, 1848), p. 203.
6. Über soziale Differenzierung (Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1890).
7. Cours d'instruction criminelle (Moscow, 1936), p. 324.
8. How Russia Is Ruled (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1953). 9.
9. The New Class (New York: Praeger, 1957).