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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper provides an overview and a comparison of the views of Max Weber and Georg Simmel on the issues of class, gender and race. This paper integrates a view of their social perspectives. Bibliography lists 6
sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHSocThe.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Georg Simmel on Class, Gender and Race Research Compiled by 11/2001 Please Social theorists Georg
Simmel and Max Weber provided distinct arguments regarding the nature of man in the world, including views of issues like class, gender and ethnicity as they serve to unite or
divide man within the social realm. Both of these theorists relate elements like class and gender to components of what has been deemed "conflict theory" and underscore the correlation
between social roles, expectations and change. Social theorists like Simmel, Karl Marx, John Stuart Mill and Max Weber have suggested that a variety of elements, including position within a
hierarchy, class, race, gender and even nationalistic perspectives have all lent themselves to the development of interpersonal communication systems based inherently in human conflict. When applying this concept to
specific issues, it is possible to recognize the importance of understanding the basis of conflict theory in order to address the correlation that exists in the function of social systems
relative to these variables. Class Georg Simmels perspectives have been linked to the views of the philosopher Immanuel Kant and relate the fact that society is
made up of fundamental interactions between individuals and that the unification of men has led to social laws that further define the problem of mans conflicted sense of community (Farganis
113). While theorists like Karl Marx viewed the collective as a primary element and separation from the collective as an individual choice, Simmel reversed this perspective, suggesting that interpersonal
interactions should be considered first when assessing the impact of conflict theory and the basis for collective decision-making. In other words, while both Marx and Kant presented their social
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