PARSONS, TALCOTT


Meaning of PARSONS, TALCOTT in English

born Dec. 13, 1902, Colorado Springs, Colo., U.S. died May 8, 1979, Munich, W.Ger. American sociologist and scholar whose theory of social action influenced the intellectual bases of several disciplines in modern sociology. His work is concerned with a general theoretical system for the analysis of society rather than with narrower empirical studies. After receiving his B.A. from Amherst (Mass.) College in 1924, Parsons studied at the London School of Economics and at the University of Heidelberg, where he received his Ph.D. in 1927. He joined the faculty of Harvard University as an instructor in economics; he began to teach sociology in 1931, became full professor in 1944, and was appointed chairman of the new department of social relations in 1946, a post he held until 1956. He remained at Harvard until his retirement in 1973. Parsons served as president of the American Sociological Society in 1949. Parsons united clinical psychology and social anthropology with sociology, a fusion still operating in the social sciences. His work is generally thought to constitute an entire school of social thought. In his first major work, The Structure of Social Action (1937), Parsons drew on elements from the works of several European writers (Alfred Marshall, Vilfredo Pareto, mile Durkheim, and Max Weber) to develop a common systematic theory of social action based on a voluntaristic principle; i.e., the choices among alternative values and actions must be at least partially free. Parsons defined the locus of sociological theory as residing not in the internal field of personality, as postulated by Freud and Max Weber, but in the external field of the institutional structures developed by society. In The Social System (1951), he turned his analysis to large-scale systems and the problems of the social order, integration, and equilibrium. He advocated a structural-functional analysis, a study of the ways in which the interrelated and interacting units that form the structures of a social system contribute to the development and maintenance of that system. Other works by Parsons include Essays in Sociological Theory (1949; rev. ed. 1954), Structure and Process in Modern Societies (1960), Societies: Evolutionary and Comparative Perspectives (1966), Sociological Theory and Modern Society (1967), Politics and Social Structure (1969), and The American University (1973; with Gerald M. Platt and Neil J. Smelser). Additional reading Critical assessments of Parsons' work have been published in two collections of essays: Stability and Social Change, ed. by Bernard Barber and Alex Inkeles (1971); and Explorations in General Theory in Social Science, 2 vol., ed. by Jan J. Loubser et al. (1976).

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