Dynamic density
Population density, Social relation, Sociology, Sociocultural evolution, Mechanical and organic solidarity
978-620-0-16460-5
6200164606
108
2011-12-27
39.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In sociology, dynamic density refers to the combination of two things: population density and the amount of social interaction within that population. Dynamic density is a key component in Emile Durkheim’s theory of modernization. In his book The Division of Labor in Society ([1893] 1949), Durkheim suggests that over time, societies go through a transition from being more primitive, i.e. mechanical, to being more modern, or organic; the difference lying in the source of their solidarity, or what holds them together. (Ritzer, 2007) According to Durkheim, the cause of this transition is an increase in dynamic density, an idea he drew from earlier sociologists. "Already Adam Smith had pointed to sufficient demand as a necessary condition for specialization, and Durkheim himself refers to Comte for the idea that density of interaction is the decisive factor [for transition to occur]." (Rueschemeyer, 1982:580).
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