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Moral decline sociology: Critiquing the legacy of Durkheim
20
Citations
26
References
2014
Year
CultureMoral PracticeClassical SociologyMoral PhilosophyKey AssumptionsSociologyMoral IssueMoral Loss SociologyMoral CrisisEducationNormative EthicCritical TheorySocial ChangeMoral Decline SociologyContemporary CultureSocial AnthropologySocial SciencesModernity
This article critically evaluates key assumptions within classical and contemporary ‘decline’ moral sociology. It argues that two dominant models of moral loss sociology – the ‘cultural pessimist’ and ‘communitarians’ – are indebted to a set of Durkheimian assumptions that underwrite his original diagnosis of the moral crisis of modernity. Three specific assumptions are identified and critiqued: view of human nature and self; ‘society’ as the necessary source of morality; and the functions of morality. The article suggests that these assumptions work to ignore how self, emotions and cultural ideals of self-improvement may work as alternate moral structures in late modernity.
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