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  • Until about 12,000 years ago, the largest group of people ever assembled, the most humans ever gathered in one place, was probably a crowd of about 100, tops.

  • And there were somewhere between one and ten million people on the entire planet back then.

  • Today, we have football stadiums that can fit a hundred people a thousand times over.

  • The city of Shanghai has a population of over 24 million.

  • And there are almost 7.5 billion people on Earth!

  • How the heck did we get from there to here?

  • That might sound like a history question, and it is, partly.

  • But it's also a sociology question.

  • Because, if we want to understand how we got from small groups huddled around a fire to cities of millions,

  • we need to understand what society is and how societies change as their populations grow.

  • And we need to understand how different kinds of societies shape the people who live in them.

  • Pretty much any question you can ask about society, you can answer with the help of sociology.

  • [Theme Music]

  • As long as there have been humans, there have been societies.

  • We're social animals, and even when there were mere handfuls of us, we grouped together, forming the first societies.

  • Now, society can mean lots of different things: A few families who spend all their time hunting deer and picking mushrooms can be a society.

  • But so were the 70 million people of the Roman Empire.

  • And so are the 1.2 billion people living in India today.

  • So we need a definition that's going to include all of these things.

  • And conveniently enough, we have one: a society is simply a group of people who share a culture and a territory.

  • That's a good definition, but it doesn't really tell us much about the different kinds of societies, or how we get from one kind to another.

  • For that, we turn to the work of American sociologist Gerhard Lenski.

  • Lenski focused on technology as the main source of societal change, through a process he called sociocultural evolution:

  • the changes that occur as a society gains new technology.

  • Lenski then broke up human history into five different types of societies,

  • defined by the technology they used and the social organizations that the technology helped create and sustain.

  • If you look back to early human history, say about 30-40 thousand years ago, you find a lot of what Lenski called hunting and gathering societies.

  • In these societies, people made use of extremely basic tools to help them hunt animals and gather wild plants for food.

  • Now, if you think about how much you eat in a day, and imagine trying to gather up that much food every day, it should be pretty clear that this is no easy task.

  • So food was the major concern in these societies, and they still exist today.

  • People in hunting and gathering societies spend almost all their time trying to make sure they have enough food.

  • And they're nomadic, following migrating animals and wild harvests, so they don't build permanent settlements.

  • So, by their very nature, these societies tend to be small; hunting and gathering can't support a group of more than 25 to 40 people effectively.

  • And in order for hunting and gathering to support even that, everyone has to work to find food,

  • and everyone has to share their resources in order to ensure the survival of the group.

  • This means that these societies have very low inequality.

  • For the vast majority of human history, every single person lived in hunting and gathering societies,

  • up until about 12,000 years ago, when the domestication of plants and animals led to new kinds of society: horticultural and pastoral societies.

  • Pastoral societies are based around the domestication of animals and are also nomadic, moving from place to place to keep their herds fed.

  • Horticultural societies, on the other hand are based on cultivating plants.

  • So, with horticultural societies we see the first human settlements, as groups began to stay put, to remain close to reliable sources of food.

  • And we also see, for the first time, the accumulation of material surplusthat is, more resources than are needed to feed the population.

  • This is incredibly important because, having a surplus allows a society to grow.

  • And it also means that not everyone needs to work on getting food and simply surviving.

  • This, in turn, leads to the first real instances of specialization in society, with separate political, religious, and military roles coming about.

  • We also get real social inequality for the first time.

  • And this same dynamic accelerates as we move into agrarian society, as permanent settlements emerge based around agricultural production.

  • Starting about 5,000 years agowith better farming techniques like the animal-drawn plow

  • we get more food production and an even bigger material surplus.

  • From this came larger populations and larger settlements, with even more specialization and even more inequality.

  • Remember serfs and nobles?

  • Feudalism was an agrarian society.

  • And you know what else happens when societies reach this point?

  • The family starts to become less important.

  • In other kinds of societies, things like education are handled almost entirely by the family.

  • But as societies grow and become more complex, those functions start to be taken up by larger social institutions, like the church or schools.

  • And now we finally start approaching present day America, with industrial societies.

  • These societies get their start with the industrial revolution around 1750, as production began to shift from human and animal power to machine power.

  • This had a massive impact on food production, with new technologies like the tractor and

  • the combine producing huge surpluses that could support even larger populations with even more specialization.

  • But the industrial revolution also marked a fundamental change in the organization of society itself.

  • Societies far larger than anything seen before meant a greater need to assert centralized control over everything

  • from the production of goods, to transportation, to agricultural productionin order to keep things running smoothly.

  • For the first time, human society moved away from a subsistence-based economy.

  • As mass production became possible, a capital-based economy emerged.

  • As the surplus grew and specialization increased, so did inequality, with factory workers spending 12 hour days on one end,

  • and incredibly wealthycaptains of industrymaking enormous profits on the other.

  • It's no coincidence that, soon after the industrial revolution, Marxism and conflict theory emerged.

  • And the decreasing importance of the family continued as well, as more institutions stepped into traditional family roles.

  • Industrial societies were the first to have universal public education, for instance.

  • And, for the first time, the majority of health care and caregiving were institutionalized, done outside the home in hospitals.

  • The need to keep production organized also meant an increasingly urbanized population.

  • Because, it's easier to control the resources you need if they're centralized.

  • So people moved from the countryside to urban centers, where the industrial jobs were.

  • And all of this keeps going in Lenski's scheme of things, with specialization and technological innovation continuing,

  • until the development of the computer, a technology that gave rise to the postindustrial society.

  • In postindustrial societies, we still see specialization, increased urbanization, and technological advances.

  • But the defining change is that postindustrial societies shift away from an economy based on raw materials and manufacturing,

  • to an economy based based on information, services, and technology.

  • This is how we got here.

  • If you look at the most dynamic sectors of the US economy, you see massive wealth being created in tech, finance, and service industries, but a steady decline in manufacturing.

  • That said, it's not as though Americans don't buy stuff.

  • Apps can do a lot of things, but they can't (yet) conjure a car out of the ether for you.

  • So this is a good chance to point out that these different types of society aren't isolated from each other.

  • You can't have a postindustrial society without having industrial societies elsewhere to supply it with goods.

  • This points again to increasing inequalitynot just within one society, but across societies.

  • So, in Lenski's understanding, societal change is driven by technological change.

  • But, it's worth pointing out that not all of these changes are beneficial.

  • Pollution, global warming, and large-scale warfare are new problems that technology has brought us.

  • And, technology doesn't solve fundamental societal problems.

  • It has the potential to reorganize society, but technology can't tell us how to have peaceful or just societies.

  • In fact, just looking at Lenski's classifications, you can see that advancing technology also advances inequality in society, making it increasingly unequal.

  • So, we can't limit our discussion of society to just looking at technology.

  • But that's okay, because the sociocultural changes that Lenski talks about can also be understood using the work of some old friends: Marx, Weber, and Durkheim.

  • Marx, for example, might seem pretty similar to Lenski at first:

  • If you think back to his theory of historical materialism, he certainly seems to put a strong focus on technology and the economy as the driving forces of history.

  • Remember? He saw that changes in the forces of production are important in pushing the change from one mode of production to another.

  • But for Marx, you only get large-scale social change through class struggle, which culminates in a revolution,

  • overthrowing the old relations of production and replacing them with an entirely new set.

  • So in Marx's view, the transition between Lenski's stages requires technological change, but it also requires revolution.

  • And we can also use Marx's understanding of conflict to compare Lenski's stages with each other.

  • In hunting and gathering societies, for example, conflict and inequality are leveled by the lack of surplus and the need to share resources.

  • But that's not the case in postindustrial society.

  • Max Weber, for his part, seems further away from Lenski than Marx, focusing not on technology or revolution, but on ideas.

  • The major transition that Weber talked about was the shift from traditional to modern society,

  • which he argued was really a matter of rationalization.

  • Now, it's not that Weber didn't appreciate the importance of technology.

  • But he argued that the transition from agrarian to industrial society, for instance, began with a shift in ideas

  • like new techniques in accounting and ways of approaching social organization.

  • And it was these ideas, combined with advances in technology, that produced the overall change.

  • So in this view, both ideas and technology were crucial for the emergence of modern capitalism.

  • And Durkheim, finally, took a different tack from either Marx or Weber.

  • He approached the transitions that Lenski talked about from the perspective of a society's underlying social structure.

  • Specifically, Durkheim saw the history of society as a long term change in solidarity, a change in what held societies together.

  • He argued that hunting and gathering societies were held together by similarity, what he called mechanical solidarity.

  • Durkheim argued that everyone in these societies had the same skills and lived in basically the same way.

  • But that changed as society developed and specialization increased.

  • With more specialization, people became more differentiated, taking on different jobs, learning different skills, and living in different ways.

  • But, Durkheim argued, people also became more tightly integrated, because they became more interdependent.

  • Factory workers needed farmers to make food so that they could eat, and farmers needed factory workers to make their tools and other goods.

  • Durkheim called this interdependence organic solidarity.

  • And so Lenski's sociocultural evolution is, for Durkheim, the story of a long transition from mechanical to organic solidarity.

  • Ultimately, all of these ways of looking at society and its changes, from the point of view of technology, or conflict and revolution,

  • or ideas, or underlying social structure, are important for understanding what society is and how it works.

  • Each one of these perspectives sees things that the others miss, and each one is important for the discipline of sociology.

  • Today we learned about the society, what it is and how it changes.

  • We talked about Gerhard Lenski's classification of societies into five types, and the technological changes that turn one into another.

  • We returned to Marx and Weber, and talked about how they understood societal change.

  • And we also talked about Durkheim's understanding of society and how social solidarity can be mechanical or organic.

  • Crash Course Sociology is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney Studio in Missoula, MT, and it's made with the help of all these nice people.

  • Our Animation Team is Thought Cafe and Crash Course is made with Adobe Creative Cloud.

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Until about 12,000 years ago, the largest group of people ever assembled, the most humans ever gathered in one place, was probably a crowd of about 100, tops.

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