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Unit 7
You are probably familiar with idealism as I’ve defined it above. It is a common belief in our culture and a number of you have expressed idealist points of view in the weekly discussions. But you may not be as familiar with materialism. Again, materialism to a sociologist is not quite the same thing it is to a non-sociologist. We don’t mean just a desire for material goods. For us materialism is a philosophical position that suggests that matter is the only reality and everything in the world can be understood and explained in terms of matter. “Matter” refers to material, things of substance, concrete; material things occupy space and have a tangible existence. Buildings, roads, mountains, and computers are all material objects. Materialism, in philosophy, is the belief that social change and individual attitudes and behaviors are the result of physical processes, not the ideas of individuals. Many sociologists also think that material forces are what determine the things that happen in a society or to an individual.
Some examples of material forces are the physical environment, population size, and material technologies. While it doesn’t appear to affect us so strongly any more, it is clear that the physical environment shapes the lives and cultures of pre-industrial people. Groups who live in deserts have different religions, family patterns, political systems, and economic bases than groups who live in forests. However, global warming is a material force that may very well affect our own culture and way of life. Population size, as a material force, can be seen if we compare the cultures of people who live in small tribal groups with those who live in large industrial societies. It can also be seen by comparing rural and urban lifestyles in our own society. One of the most interesting examples of the effects of population size occurred during the middle ages. The Black Death, or bubonic plague, killed a huge proportion of the population of Great Britain during the 1400s. In some areas, so many people died and labor was so scarce that agriculture was no longer a feasible option and many farmers turned to raising sheep for the wool markets in the Netherlands. Large numbers of sheep could be managed with just a few shepherds and their dogs. The influx of wool from Britain helped to fuel the industrial revolution (which started with textiles) and thereby influenced all of our lives. Since you are already familiar with the idealist perspective, I’m going to focus here on the impacts of technology as a material force. We’ve already discussed the impacts of technology on our on lives. Computers, the internet, automobiles, and cell phones are just a few of the more common material factors that affect what we do. The question that arises in this discussion is whether or not those material factors are more important in shaping society, social change, and ourselves than our ideas about the world. Now I know that your immediate response will be that, of course, our ideas matter; that what we think and believe are the most important causal factors. I would, as a sociologist, expect you to say that. But I’d like you to, for just a moment, consider an alternative point of view. Consider the materialist perspective. Link it to the lectures on the sociological imagination and systems theory. The sociological imagination suggests that the time and place in which we live shapes who we become. Not just how we live, but who we ARE. This shaping is done largely through the technologies we have available. Using a horse as our major means of transportation dictates a different way of life than using an automobile. Consider the materialist perspective. Link it to the lectures on the sociological imagination and systems theory. The sociological imagination suggests that the time and place in which we live shapes who we become. Not just how we live, but who we ARE. This shaping is done largely through the technologies we have available. Using a horse as our major means of transportation dictates a different way of life than using an automobile. System theory tells us that changes at larger scales have an immediate and often dramatic effect on smaller scales while it takes a long time for changes at the micro level to filter up to the larger levels. Look how quickly computers and the internet have changed our daily lives. Look how it has changed yours. You might not be enrolled in college at all and you certainly wouldn’t be reading this at home in your fuzzy slippers were it not for the internet. This opportunity is not the result of your ideas or beliefs. It is possible only because the material technologies exist. Demonstrating your understanding of idealism and materialism.
Most of us are uneasy about
cloning animals and dead set against the reproduction of human in this
fashion. Will the fact that we think it immoral stop the development of
this technology? I don’t think so. We could ban it here in the US
(we won’t but we could) but that won’t stop development in
the rest of the world. If we don’t, they will. That material fact
spurs the development of many technologies – cloning and other forms
of biotechnology, nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction
are just two examples among hundreds.
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