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Journal of Classical Sociology
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Giddings and the Social Mind

James J. Chriss

Cleveland State University, USA

The idea of a social (or general) mind was prevalent in early American sociology from the 1880s through about the 1910s. As a concept, the social mind served as a proxy for what would later be defined and understood as culture and other collective phenomena such as social movements, crowd behavior, organizational behavior (e.g. ‘corporate actors’), and so forth. In the early stages of the development of sociology in America, sociologists such as Lester F. Ward and Franklin H. Giddings (1855–1931) were struggling to establish sociology as a legitimate science, and they needed to ground this new science of society in an object or reality that existed above the level of the individual members of society (for not doing so would bring the charge that sociology was nothing more than a watered-down version of psychology). In this paper I examine specifically Giddings’ writings on the social mind, for they illustrate how subjectivist or idealist elements can be incorporated into an overtly positivistic or naturalistic theoretical framework.

Key Words: behaviorism • consciousness of kind • Giddings • social mind

Journal of Classical Sociology, Vol. 6, No. 1, 123-144 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1468795X06061289


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J. J. Chriss
Review Essay: Addams, Ward et al. American Sociology Past to Present: Louise W. Knight, Citizen: Jane Addams and the Struggle for Democracy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005. 582 pp. ISBN 0--226--44699--9 (hbk). Craig Calhoun, Sociology in America: A History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007. 913 pp. 0--226--09095--7 (pbk)
Journal of Classical Sociology, November 1, 2008; 8(4): 491 - 502.
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