• Necuno
    16
    Good morning,

    In the introduction to his 1924 book, Outlines of Introductory Sociology, Clarence Marsh Case discusses sociology within the context of "Four Orders of Natural Phenomenon." He states, "The four orders are the inorganic, the vital organic, the mental organic and the super-organic, or social." (p. xvii). The corresponding four divisions of human knowledge of these orders are then the physical sciences, the biological sciences, the psychological/psychiatric sciences, and the social sciences.

    I had (suprisingly) not heard this structure previously (or at least stated in this way, in high school a loooooong time ago, there were the 'hard sciences' and the 'soft sciences'), but it is intuitive, nearly axiomatic, and very useful to the argument I am forming in my work. I have been unable to locate the source of this structure, but I assume it comes from Philosophy of Science from sometime in the 17th to 19th Centuries.

    Does anyone know the source of the four orders of natural phenomenon structure?

    Unfortunately, this book is not available online, but some of his other books are available at http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Case%2C%20Clarence%20Marsh%2C%201874%2D

    Thank you,

    Necuno (it's Interlinga).

  • GaluchatAccepted Answer
    809

    Does anyone know the source of the four orders of natural phenomenon structure? — Necuno

    Common observation would be my guess.

    But in sociological terms, Auguste Comte's five great groups of phenomena (astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology, and sociology) was a likely influence on subsequent sociologists.

    Penchef, Esther H. 1947. The Sociological Thought Of Clarence Marsh Case; Its Origins, Development, Significance, And Its Relation To The Contributions Of Other Sociologists. Published by ProQuest LLC (2014). 64ff.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Unless there's evidence otherwise, I'd assume that Case is the source for this.
  • Necuno
    16
    Thank you, that's a good clue. Before he reaches the four orders, on the preceding page, he has a footnote referring to "the Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte." This was however, in reference to an argument that math is not supreme:

    "The student of mathematics does not, as a mathematician, know anything whatsoever about the world of concrete reality. This is true because mathematics is not a body of knowledge with respect to any of the order of phenomena in the objective world. It deals with concepts and is a kind of quantitative logic, purely subjective in its essential nature. But that is not to say that it is not an immensely valuable discipline. Quite the contrary. While one who knew only mathematics, even if he mastered it all, would know nothing about the objective, phenomenal world, he would be in command of an incomparable mental equipment for the accurate explanation of natural phenomena if he were to turn his mathematically equipped mind to their systematic investigation. Thus it is that pure mathematics, far from being a single science, is no science at all. It is, however, the measure of accuracy for all sciences, or the 'standard of positivity,' as Comte expressed it." - Clarence Marsh Case, Outlines of Introductory Sociology (1924), p. xvi.

    Thus, Mr. Case was familiar with Comte (but I am not) and you may be correct that he deduced the four orders from Comte.

    I also did not know there was a book about Mr. Case. So I may take a look at the PDF. Mr. Case wrote mostly about non-violent resistance from what I gather, but I found his four orders fertile ground.

    Thank you much :-)
  • Galuchat
    809
    The classification of phenomena affected the development (scope) of the Social Sciences in general, and Sociology in particular, during Case's career.

    My own classification is similar, but uses terms suitable to Cognitive Psychology, then Social Psychology, and finally Sociology, as follows:

    1) Physical
    a) Inorganic
    i) Natural
    ii) Artificial
    b) Organic
    i) Human Body
    ii) Human Social Group

    2) Mental
    a) Human Mind
    b) Human Culture
  • Necuno
    16
    I responded to your comment half an hour ago, but my response disappeared. Can you see it?
  • Galuchat
    809

    I read it, and then it disappeared.
  • Necuno
    16
    Thanks, I am trying to figure out how to have a conversation here if my responses disappear seconds after I post them. Thanks, I thought your response must have been to mine. :smile:
  • Galuchat
    809

    Probably down to user error (yours and/or mine).
    How is a classification of phenomena useful to your project?
  • Necuno
    16
    My project, in part, involves an argument about macrosociology. Mr. Case's four orders provided a structural ground for the argument; Mr. Case argues that society/culture is a fourth order natural phenomenon. This ties into a lot of threads, e.g., arguments that social phenomena must be treated as facts equal to first and second order phenomena, Professor Elwell's comments about the current overwhelming dominance of microsociology, the development of true fourth order phenomenon terms and descriptions, etc. Mr. Case's intro also provides a historical record of the struggles of sociology to be recognized as science in the early 20th Century, much of which still echoes today.
  • Galuchat
    809

    How would you modify my classification to accommodate macrosociology (assuming that it already accommodates microsociology)?

    Is this the Professor Elwell you are referring to:
    Elwell, Frank W. 2013. Sociocultural Systems. AU Press, Athabasca University. Edmonton, AB.
  • Necuno
    16
    Yes, that is Professor Elwell. I don't have that book, but I have two other textbooks he wrote on macrosocial theory on my Kindle: Macro Social Theory (2009) and Macrosocial Theory: Four Modern Theorists (2006). I believe he is the only one writing macrosocial textbooks in the United States currently, he has a video on YouTube where he lectures parts of the intros of one of the books, and he also has a large cache of 45+ essays on various subjects and authors that can be found at https://faculty.rsu.edu . They are all free to read and save (print, save as PDF). He is an expert on past theorist.

    Professor Emeritus Mary Jo Deegan also has a book from 2008 that I don't think is intended as a textbook per se, called Self, War and Society: George Herbert Mead's Macrosociology. Professor Elwell does not place Mead in his pantheon of founders of macrosociology (in fact, does not even mention him in the two books I have, word search is a great invention) and Mead has always been an issue because he is claimed as the founder of "American sociology."

    I like Mr. Case's classifications because they are simple and intuitive and the audience can thus grasp them immediately. Artificial wasn't really a big issue in 1924, no one had yet thought of cloning, the technological singularity, even the atom bomb was just a theory, also, by definition, artificial can't be a 'natural phenomenon' and thus would not have a place in the four orders unless as a special extension of the fourth order (i.e. man made as a natural phenomenon of humanity).

    There are many ways to slice the pie, it just depends on what you want at the end, I have had many times to decide how to slice the pie in my project. In your classification, the fourth order would simply become 1) b) ii) and 2) b) (or not to be...), I am not sure if you did that intentionally or not, but it's pretty clever.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    I like Mr. Case's classifications because they are simple and intuitive and the audience can thus grasp them immediately. Artificial wasn't really a big issue in 1924, no one had yet thought of cloning, the technological singularity, even the atom bomb was just a theory, also, by definition, artificial can't be a 'natural phenomenon' and thus would not have a place in the four orders unless as a special extension of the fourth order (i.e. man made as a natural phenomenon of humanity).Necuno
    Out of the three posted in this thread (Case's, Comte's and Galuchat's), I prefer Case's as well for pretty much the same reasons you provided.

    However, I think "artificial" is more of a traditionalist term that originated from the anthropomorphic idea that human's are special creations, or separate from nature. Humans are the outcomes of natural processes and anything that they create, or invent, is as natural as the process of more complex elements being created inside of star and then littered across the galaxy when the star dies. Birds make nests. Beavers make dams. All species change their environment. It is just a matter of degrees that seems proportional to their morphology. The degree to which humans can manipulate their environment is a result of their unique (special) morphology (bipedalism which leaves two appendages for evolving hands - which have opposable thumbs - and of course large brains).
  • Necuno
    16
    It appears that between Comte and Case, a transformation was underway in the way the world was classified (and this is historically interesting, we often forget to put famous people in their historical milieu, Friedrich Nietzsche's "alienated from the present"):

    1) By 1924, intellectuals and scientists understood that astronomy, chemistry and physics were all part of the same continuum. Stars have chemistry, astronomy makes and bows to physics, and there was a whole lot going on there, but it was all in the same 'spectrum'. Thus, Comte's first three categories collapsed into the first order of natural phenomenon in Case's structure.

    2) Mr. Case makes clear in the introduction that the mental sciences were just recently becoming members of the "elite circle" (formerly occupied exclusively by physics and biology) and modern psychology was not yet ready during the time of Comte - Comte died the year after Freud was born. So in Case's structure, the mental sciences in 1924 were added into the third slot (i.e. the third order of natural phenomenon).
  • Galuchat
    809
    There are many ways to slice the pie, it just depends on what you want at the end, I have had many times to decide how to slice the pie in my project.Necuno

    Are there natural kinds, or are classifications merely cultural and/or linguistic conventions?
    And if there are natural kinds, does that imply artificial kinds?
  • Necuno
    16
    Are there natural kinds, or are classifications merely cultural and/or linguistic conventions?Galuchat

    There are natural phenomenon and interpretations. One cannot claim that natural phenomenon are themselves cultural/linguistic conventions, e.g., the Sokal Hoax. But we have interpreted them in different ways - as history shows - that are suitable for the milieu of the times, compare Aristotle to modern physics. Part of the issue is that interpretations have not been accepted as equally factual, instead they have been dismissed as non-objective, illusion, human fallacy.

    The fallacy has been to try to treat them as facts within the first order, whereas they are actually facts within the fourth order. The same fallacy occurs in reverse when you try to deny that first order facts are facts within the fourth order - i.e. treating physical facts as cultural/linguistic constructs - again, the Sokal Hoax. There is not exactly a symmetry in this arrangement, facts of lower orders cannot be denied by higher orders, but facts of higher orders are not facts in lower orders. It's sort of like the way time flows in only one direction (I hadn't actually thought of it this way before I typed this). Time is then probably - is definitely - related to - is probably even the 'cause of' - emergences in all the orders.

    I'll give your second question some thought.
  • Galuchat
    809
    1) By 1924, intellectuals and scientists understood that astronomy, chemistry and physics were all part of the same continuum.Necuno

    So, Sociology reduces to Psychology, then Biology, then Chemistry, then Physics?


    Part of the issue is that interpretations have not been accepted as equally factual, instead they have been dismissed as non-objective, illusion, human fallacy. — Necuno

    This conflates interpretation and fact, whereas; interpretation is an attempt to explain fact(s).

    The fallacy has been to try to treat them as facts within the first order, whereas they are actually facts within the fourth order. — Necuno

    So, the orders (or levels of abstraction) are incommensurable?

    The same fallacy occurs in reverse when you try to deny that first order facts are facts within the fourth order - i.e. treating physical facts as cultural/linguistic constructs - again, the Sokal Hoax. — Necuno

    So, learning how to play the violin, or dealing with culture shock can be explained in terms of quantum mechanical interactions between elementary particles?

    There is not exactly a symmetry in this arrangement, facts of lower orders cannot be denied by higher orders, but facts of higher orders are not facts in lower orders. — Necuno

    I think it would be silly to deny facts at any order (level of abstraction). But, this suggests that I cannot describe quantum mechanical interactions between elementary particles in terms of learning how to play the violin, or dealing with culture shock; which I agree with.
  • Necuno
    16
    Ahhh, Galuchat pounces!

    I will try to respond in order to your objections (rather than embedding quotes in quotes):

    1. You misread my previous. Comte's astronomy chemistry and physics became Mr. Case's first order of natural phenomenon because they are all part of a continuum in the non-living physical world. This continuum was perhaps not clear in Comte's time, but was clear by 1924 (Einstein, the Curies, Planck did their major work in the late 19th century to the early 20th century, it was becoming clear that the physical universe was a continuum running from the sub-atomic to the stars and galaxies, with different frames of reference, i.e. that the rules of Newtonian physics applied to stars and galaxies but not to the atomic or sub-atomic, and so on).

    However, it is also true in Mr. Case's structure that physics, biology, psychology and sociology form a continuum through the first through fourth orders of natural phenomenon, for example, if you connect physics and biology via abiogenesis.

    2) I do not believe I am conflating interpretation with fact. Within the first order of natural phenomenon, interpretation is not fact, as you said, in that framework, an interpretation is an attempt to explain facts. Within the fourth order of natural phenomenon, and even the third, it must be regarded as fact to humanity but not fact to the first order of natural phenomenon.

    3) I believe it in implicit in Mr. Case's four orders of natural phenomenon that the orders are incommensurable. This also does not seem to be incorrect in observation.

    4) I understand that there is considerable interplay between quantum interpretation and metaphysics and that it is often dismissed in the scientific community as 'quantum mysticism' (which is not exactly the same, but sometimes relates).

    As you seem to have answered your last question on your own, I agree to the extent of your answer and will not delve further in quantum metaphysics except to say that one should not confuse emergent with quantum interactions in all cases; e.g., a snowflake is often used as an example of emergent behavior in the first order of natural phenomenon and video games are often written to intentionally generate emergent narrative during play by humans, because that is what humans do.
  • Galuchat
    809

    Thanks for your clarifications.
  • Necuno
    16
    Thank you Galuchat, I hope I have not offended?

    I am a 'tendentious pedant' - a phrase I picked up from Norman Spinrad a few years ago (I highly recommend reading The Void Captain's Tale (1982) - a challenging read but quite a bit of philosophy in it - and Science Fiction in the Real World (1990)).

    And thank you all, this has been a good discussion I think, and it has clarified some points and brought to the fore some questions I had not thought of previously. :smile:

    I was out for awhile yesterday and so was not on the forums, but began thinking of an outline of the argument that I have made from Mr. Case's four orders of natural phenomenon (both here and in my project), and I have been busy tapping away at it this morning. :flower:
  • Galuchat
    809
    Thank you Galuchat, I hope I have not offended? — Necuno

    Not at all.
    I look forward to reading more from you, as my current interests also lie in the Social Sciences.
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