Gemeinschaft Society The Work Gemeinschaft Is Translated Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
1087
Cite

Gemeinschaft Society The work Gemeinschaft is translated as "community" and is a reference to the "closeness of holistic social relationships said to be found in pre-industrial communities, and imputed to the community as moral worth." (Hughes, nd, p.1) Gemeinschaft is reported to be dependent in terms of its existence upon the member's "subjective will" and as stated in the work of Tonnies (1925) "The very existence of Gemeinschaft rests in the consciousness of belonging together and the affirmation of the condition of mutual dependence." (p.69) While a similar association exists in what is known as Gesellschaft, this society or association is based on unity based on "common traits and activities and other external phenomena." (Tonnies, 1925, p.67) Such as the "ethnic community, community of speech and community of work" are not Gemeinschaft since they are lacking the critical factor of "shared feeling which is essential to Gemeinschaft." (Hughes, nd, p.1)

Tonnies writes in the work entitled "Community and Civil Society" that Gemeinschaft must be understood "as a living organism in its own right, while Gesellschaft is a mechanical aggregate and artifact." (nd, p.1) Everything that is real is reported by Tonnies to be "organic in the sense that it must be seen in conjunction with the whole material world, which governs its nature and movements." (nd, p.3) The theory of Gemeinschaft is such that has as its basis the belief that in the natural state a complete unity of human wills exists and that this unity is held steady even when individuals are separate. This complete unit takes on various forms and this is stated to be dependent upon "how far the...

...

22) Tonnies writes that the two things that these relationships have in common is the all encompassing "character of the sub-conscious 'vegetative' life that stems from birth: human wills, each one housed in a physical body are related to another by descent and kinship; they remain united, or become so out of necessity." (nd, p.22) Surety is illustrated in its greatest forms in three specific relationships including the relationship between a child and its' mother, the relationship between a woman and man as a couple and the relationship between those who are sisters and brothers or otherwise stated siblings who have the same mother. The "seed of Gemeinschaft," or the belief held by the human being towards Gemeinschaft is that of any kin relationship with these three being the most important and the strongest from the view of Gemeinschaft. (Tonnies, nd, p.23) Each of the three relationships is held to be significant in their own special way. Firstly, the relationship between the child and mother is stated to be "deeply rooted in pure instinct and pleasures, and at the same time the shading over from a physical to purely spiritual relationship is here at its most apparent, particularly at the beginning." (Tonnies, nd, p. 23) The relationship is characterized as a longitudinal relationship with the child being nurtured and protected by the mother until the child is able to take care of itself. The relationship however remains connected due to shared memories and the sacrifices of the mother for the child. These are "direct mutual connections" but these are stated to…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Hughes, I. (nd) Gemeinschaft (community) and Gesellschaft (society). Retrieved from: http://foster.20megsfree.com/544.htm

Tonnies F (1925) "The Concept of Gemeinschaft," in Cahnman WJ & Heberle R (Eds) Ferdinand Tonnies on Sociology: Pure, applied and empirical. Selected writings, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp62-72.

Tonnies, F. (nd) Community and Civil Society. Cambridge University Press. (eds) Jose Harris. (Trans) Jose Harris and Margaret Hollis. Retrieved from: http://www.tlu.ee/files/arts/10245/T%C3%B6nn31a3d7f11826a4143580359cbb9fb159.pdf


Cite this Document:

"Gemeinschaft Society The Work Gemeinschaft Is Translated" (2013, March 24) Retrieved April 16, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gemeinschaft-society-the-work-gemeinschaft-102388

"Gemeinschaft Society The Work Gemeinschaft Is Translated" 24 March 2013. Web.16 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gemeinschaft-society-the-work-gemeinschaft-102388>

"Gemeinschaft Society The Work Gemeinschaft Is Translated", 24 March 2013, Accessed.16 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/gemeinschaft-society-the-work-gemeinschaft-102388

Related Documents

Some of them embraced this message of fear and hatred so much so that they drove west along the highway (in cars driven by adults, of course) to Geselltown, pelting the teens that they saw out of the car windows with rocks and calling them names. Other teens silently listened to the speeches of the elders, but still wished they had the freedoms of the teens in Geselltown. When

Sociology: Changing Societies in a Diverse World (Fourth Edition) George J. Bryjak & Michael P. Soroka Chapter One Summary of Key Concepts Sociology is the field of study which seeks to "describe, explain, and predict human social patterns" from a scientific perspective. And though Sociology is part of the social sciences (such as psychology and anthropology), it is quite set apart from the other disciplines in social science; that is because it emphasizes

homosexual practices might have begun in the early centuries, the word "sodomy" was first used by a Catholic missionary, now a saint, Father Peter Damien around 1050. By sodomy, he meant masturbation and anal intercourse between men, a sin he condemned as the most perverse of sexual sins in his long letter to the Pope, entitled "the Book of Gomorrah." He emphasized that God designed sex exclusively for procreation

In fact, development of the idea will be substituted for life (Hegel, 1988). The article on natural right and the System der Sittlichkeit complete each other. The first is destined to reveal a new way of posing the problem of natural right while the second is an attempt to solve this problem by the method proposed here (Goldstein, 2004). The System der Sittlichkeit, like the Platonic republic, is the conception

Even though the Gypsies in prewar Germany consisted of a very limited per capita population they received massive amounts of attention from the Regime and were left ripe for further marginalization and destruction. Though they made up less than 0.1% of the German population (between 20,000 and 30,000), Gypsies, like Jews, received disproportionate attention from the authorities as the various agencies of the state sought to transform Germany into a racially