Convergence (Sociology)
Convergence (Sociology)
‘The idea that societies move toward a condition of similiarity—that they converge in one or more respects—is a common feature in various theories of social change. The notion that differences among societies will decrease over time can be found in many works of eighteenth and nineteenth century social thinkers, from the prerevolutionary French philosophes and the Scottish moral philosophers through de Tocqueville, Toennies, Maine, Marx, Spencer, Weber, and Durkheim (Weinberg 1969; Baum 1974). More recently, the study of ”postindustrial” society and the debate over ”postmodernist” aspects of contemporary society also reflect to some degree the idea that there is a tendency for broadly similar conditions or attributes to emerge among otherwise distinct and dissimilar societies.’[1]
‘Convergence Theories’, what-when-how, accessed 18 April 2024, https://what-when-how.com/sociology/convergence-theories/. ↩︎