|
To Durkheim, men were
creatures whose desires were unlimited. Unlike other animals, they
are not satiated when their biological needs are fulfilled. "The
more one has, the more one wants, since satisfactions received only
stimulate instead of filling needs." It follows from this natural
insatiability of the human animal that his desires can only be held
in check by external controls, that is, by societal control. Society
imposes limits on human desires and constitutes "a regulative
force [which] must play the same role for moral needs which the
organism plays for physical needs." In well-regulated societies,
social controls set limits on individual propensities so that "each
in his sphere vaguely realizes the extreme limits on individual
propensities so that "each in his sphere vaguely realizes the
extreme limits set to his ambitions and aspires to nothing beyond.
. . . Thus, an end or a goal [is] set to the passions." When social regulations
break down, the controlling influence of society on individual propensities
is no longer effective and individuals are left to their own devices.
Such a state of affairs Durkheim calls anomie, a tern that refers
to a condition of relative normlessness in a whole society or in
some of its component groups. Anomie does not refer to a state of
mind, but to a property of the social structure. It characterizes
a condition in which individual desires are no longer regulated
by common norms and where, as a consequence, individuals are left
without moral guidance in the pursuit of their goals.
Although complete anomie,
or total normlessness, is empirically impossible, societies may
be characterized by greater or lesser degrees of normative regulations.
Moreover, within any particular society, groups may differ in the
degree of anomie that besets them. Social change may create anomie
either in the whole society or in some parts of it. Business crises,
for example, may have a far greater impact on those on the higher
reaches of the social pyramid than on the underlying population.
When depression leads to a sudden downward mobility, the men affected
experience a de-regulation in their lives--a loss of moral certainty
and customary expectations that are no longer sustained by the group
to which these men once belonged. Similarly, the rapid onset of
prosperity may lead some people to a quick upward mobility and hence
deprive them of the social support needed in their new styles of
life. Any rapid movement in the social structure that upsets previous
networks in which life styles are embedded carries with it a chance
of anomie.
Durkheim argued that
economic affluence, by stimulating human desires, carries with it
dangers of anomic conditions because it "deceives us into believing
that we depend on ourselves only," while "poverty protects
against suicide because it is a restraint in itself." Since
the realization of human desires depends upon the resources at hand,
the poor are restrained, and hence less prone to suffer from anomie
by virtue of the fact that they possess but limited resources. "The
less one has the less he is tempted to extend the range of his needs
indefinitely."
By accounting for the
different susceptibility to anomie in terms of the social process--that
is, the relations between individuals rather than the biological
propensities of individuals-- Durkheim in effect proposed a specifically
sociological theory of deviant behavior even though he failed to
point to the general implications of this crucial insight. In the
words of Robert K. Merton, who was the first to ferret out in this
respect the overall implications of Durkheim's thought and to develop
them methodically, "Social structures exert a definite pressure
upon certain persons in the society to engage in nonconforming rather
than conforming conduct."
Durkheim's program of
study, the overriding problems in all his work, concerns the sources
of social order and disorder, the forces that make for regulation
or de-regulation in the body social. His work on suicide, of which
the discussion and analysis of anomie forms a part, must be read
in this light. Once he discovered that certain types of suicide
could be accounted for by anomie, he could then use anomic suicide
as an index for the otherwise unmeasurable degree of social integration.
This was not circular reasoning, as could be argued, but a further
application of his method of analysis. He reasoned as follows: There
are no societies in which suicide does not occur, and many societies
show roughly the same rates of suicide over long periods of time.
This indicates that suicides may be considered a "normal,"
that is, a regular, occurrence. However, sudden spurts in the suicide
rates of certain groups or total societies are "abnormal"
and point to some perturbations not previously present. Hence. "abnormally"
high rates in specific groups or social categories, or in total
societies, can be taken as an index of disintegrating forces at
work in a social structure.
Durkheim distinguished
between types of suicide according to the relation of the actor
to his society. When men become "detached from society,"
when they are thrown upon their own devices and loosen the bonds
that previously had tied them to their fellow, they are prone to
egoistic, or individualistic, suicide. When the normative regulations
surrounding individual conduct are relaxed and hence fail to curb
and guide human propensities, men are susceptible to succumbing
to anomic suicide. To put the matter differently, when the restraints
of structural integration, as exemplified in the operation of organic
solidarity, fail to operate, men become prone to egoistic suicide;
when the collective conscience weakens, men fall victim to anomic
suicide.
In addition to egoistic
and anomic types of suicide, Durkheim refers to altruistic and fatalistic
suicide. The latter is touched upon only briefly in his work, but
the former is of great importance for an understanding of Durkheim's
general approach. Altruistic suicide refers to cases in which suicide
can be accounted for by overly strong regulation of individuals,
as opposed to lack of regulation. Durkheim argues in effect that
the relation of suicide rates to social regulation is curvilinear--high
rates being associated with both excessive individuation and excessive
regulation. In the case of excessive regulation, the demands of
society are so great that suicide varies directly rather than inversely
with the degree of integration. For example, in the instance of
the Hindu normative requirement that widows commit ritual suicide
upon the funeral pyre of their husbands, or in the case of harikiri,
the individual is so strongly attuned to the demands of his society
that he is willing to take his own life when the norms so demand.
Arguing from statistical data, Durkheim shows that in modern societies
the high rates of suicide among the military cannot be explained
by the deprivations of military life suffered by the lower ranks,
since the suicide rate happens to be higher for officers than for
enlisted men. Rather, the high rate for officers can be accounted
for by a military code of honor that enjoins a passive habit of
obedience leading officers to undervalue their own lives. In such
cases, Durkheim is led to refer to too feeble degrees of individuation
and to counterpose these to the excesses of individuation or de-regulation,
which account, in his view, for the other major forms of suicide.
Durkheim's discussion
of altruistic suicide allows privileged access to some of the intricacies
of his approach. He has often been accused of having an overly anti-individualistic
philosophy, one that is mainly concerned with the taming of individual
impulse and the harnessing of the energies of individuals for the
purposes of society. Although it cannot be denied that there are
such tendencies in his work, Durkheim's treatment of altruistic
suicide indicates that he was trying to establish a balance between
the claims of individuals and those of society, rather than to suppress
individual strivings. Acutely aware of the dangers of the breakdown
of social order, he also realized that total control of component
social actors by society would be as detrimental as anomie and de-regulation.
Throughout his life he attempted to establish a balance between
societal and individual claims.
Durkheim was indeed a
thinker in the conservative tradition to the extent that he reacted
against the atomistic drift of most Enlightenment philosophy and
grounded his sociology in a concern for the maintenance of social
order. As Robert Nisbet has shown convincingly, such key terms as
cohesion, solidarity, integration, authority, ritual, and regulation
indicate that his sociology is anchored upon an anti-atomistic set
of premises. In this respect he was like his traditionalist forebears,
yet it would be a mistake to classify Durkheim as a traditionalist
social thinker. Politically he was a liberal--indeed, a defender
of the rights of individuals against the state. He also was moved
to warn against excesses of regulation over persons even though
the major thrusts of his argument were against those who, by failing
to recognize the requirements of the social order, were likely to
foster anomic states of affairs. Anomie, he argued, was as detrimental
to individuals as it was to the social order at large.
Durkheim meant to show
that a Spencerian approach to the social realm, an approach in which
the social dimension is ultimately derived from the desire of individuals
to increase the sum of their happiness, did not stand up before
the court of evidence or the court of reason. Arguing against Spencer
and the utilitarians, he maintained that society cannot be derived
from the propensity of individuals to trade and barter in order
to maximize their own happiness. This view fails to account for
the fact that people do not trade and barter at random but follow
a pattern that is normative. For men to make a contract and live
up to it, they must have a prior commitment to the meaning of a
contract in its own right. Such prior collective commitment, that
is, such a non-contractual element of contracts, constitutes the
framework of normative control. No trade or barter can take place
without social regulation and some system of positive and negative
sanctions.
Durkheim's main shafts
against individualistic social theories notwithstanding, he was
by no means oblivious of the dangers of overregulation to which
Spencer's social philosophy had been especially sensitive. Durkheim
saw man as Homo duplex--as body, desire, and appetite and also as
socialized personality. But man was specifically human only in the
latter capacity, and he became fully human only in and through society.
Hence, true moral action lies in the sacrifice of certain individual
desires for the service of groups and society. But such sacrifices
redound in the last analysis to the benefit of individuals, as well
as society, since unbridled desires lead to frustration and unhappiness
rather than to bliss and fulfillment. Modern society seems to contain,
for Durkheim, the potentialities for individualism within social
regulation. In contrast to earlier types of social organization
based on mechanical solidarity that demanded a high degree of regimentation,
modern types of organization rest on organic solidarity obtained
through the functional interdependence of autonomous individuals.
In modern societies, social solidarity is dependent upon, rather
than repressive of, individual autonomy of conduct.
Though Durkheim stressed
that in modern societies a measure of integration was achieved through
the intermeshing and mutual dependence of differentiated roles,
he came to see that these societies nevertheless could not do without
some common integration by a system of common beliefs. In earlier
social formations built on mechanical solidarity, such common beliefs
are not clearly distinct from the norms through which they are implemented
in communal action; in the case of organic solidarity, the detailed
norms have become relatively independent from overall beliefs, responding
as they do to the exigencies of differentiated role requirements,
but a general system of overall beliefs must still exist. Hence
Durkheim turned, in the last period of his scholarly life, to the
study of religious phenomena as core elements of systems of common
beliefs.
From
Coser, 1977:132-136.
|