Wednesday, October 2, 2019
The Coal Miners in France During the Second Empire Essay -- World Hist
The Coal Miners in France During the Second Empire           In this paper I will explain why revolt by the labor against capital  in Second Empire France failed.  To explain the situation, I will use  Marx's theory of capital accumulation as he presents it in {Capital}. Also  important in the theoretical description of this phenomena is the role of  tradition and the way its restraints deviate from those of the economy in  this French society. Based on this description I will discuss how the  function of management is enforced by the economy and traditions inherent  in a society.  From these considerations I will suggest additional elements  and relationships necessary for social relations change to transcend the  institutional conditions in which they exist.         Terminology relevent to a theoretical account of an event is given by  Talcott Parsons in {The Structure of Social Action}.  Here, action is  described as a system that may be divided into unit acts.  The unit act  consists of four elements. First there is an agent, or actor. Second, the  act has an end which is a future state of affairs or goal towards which the  action is oriented. Third, there is a situation where the trends of  develop- ment differ from the end towards which the action is oriented. The  situation is composed of two elements; the conditions are that which the  actor cannot manipulate in accordance with his end, and the means are that  over which he does not have control.  Finally there is a relation between  these elements; where a situation allows alterna- tive means to the end,  the course is selected from the normative orientation of the actor.  (Parsons, 1968: 44)         In order to account for the interrelationships in the historical event  ...              ... change.  Events will  subsequently no longer happen but attain meaning in the light of the source  that the charismatic element advocates.  This change in normative  orientations relative to the change in other elements of the process must  be reflected in the ideology.  The ideology of social change may not simply  be a reiffication of the old in a reactionary form.  The substance of the  ideology, in being a response to the divergence caused by the economy and  polity, must be such as to transcend that which came before it.  This final  condition, specifying the relations between elements necessary for  revolutionary change, may only be derived in a society which is neither an  organic, composite whole nor one of random atomistic ends. Rather, the  society must be one where the normative orientation for mediating between  conditions and means is one of consensus.                        
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