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Social structure?
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All Flashcards in Topic 8.1
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8.1.18 cards
Social structure?
A lasting pattern of relationships and expectations that shapes how people act — a pattern, not a building.
Social institution?
A large, organised structure with its own roles and rules — marriage, law, school, money.
Formal vs informal structure?
Formal holds by written rule and enforcement (law); informal holds by shared habit and expectation (friendship).
Why does friendship count as a structure?
It's patterned enough that everyone knows when it's been broken — that shared knowing is the structure.
Community vs society (Tönnies)?
Community (Gemeinschaft) = bound by belonging and feeling; society (Gesellschaft) = bound by rules and self-interest.
In what sense is an institution an 'agent'?
It does things no single member decided alone ('the court ruled') — a shared action, not a private one.
Why can't you point at a social structure?
It's a pattern, not a physical thing — invisible, yet it shapes almost everything you do.
Objection to institutions as agents?
Institutions have no mind or feelings — only the people inside them can truly choose and act.
8.1.28 cards
Why is the family the 'primary' social institution?
It's the FIRST one you meet and shapes you deepest — language, trust, values — before you can question it.
'Primary' — what does it mean here?
First and formative, not most important in every way or the biggest.
How do institutions shape us AND get shaped by us?
They hand us our language and values before we can choose, but each generation reforms what they teach and mean.
The two-way street idea?
Institutions pour us into shape, then we help re-pour them — we're both their product and their makers.
How has 'family' changed?
One narrow model gave way to single-parent, blended, chosen and same-sex families — a shifting pattern, not a fixed fact.
Wollstonecraft's challenge?
Traditional marriage and education were built to keep women dependent — a 'natural' arrangement was really a made one, so it can be remade.
Illich's challenge to schooling?
Schooling can trap the mind in the system it should free — so education must be questioned, not just accepted.
The top-band move on institutions?
Show an institution is MADE, not natural — then ask whether it should be remade ('natural' → 'made' → 'could be otherwise').
8.1.39 cards
'Social by nature' — the claim?
That humans are built to live in community, so we only flourish among others — not that we merely choose to cooperate.
Aristotle's 'political animal'?
A being made to live in a community (the polis); language, reason, friendship and justice only grow among others.
Aristotle's 'beast or a god' line?
Anyone who could truly live outside all community would be a beast or a god, not a normal human — we're made for society.
Individualism?
The view that society is basically a collection of separate individuals — you're an individual first, society a deal you strike second.
Hobbes on society?
He pictures separate individuals before society, who build one only to escape danger — society is a useful deal, not a natural home.
The problem for individualism?
Even the 'lone individual' learned language and reason among others first — so the individual was already shaped by a community.
Social by nature — reasoned verdict?
'Yes, but': we're deeply social by nature (Aristotle), yet still free individuals who can question and remake our institutions.
The topic's arc in one line?
Structures & institutions (8.1.1) → family, marriage, education (8.1.2) → are we social by nature? (8.1.3).
Social philosophy on the exam?
An optional theme → Paper 1 Section B: an essay on a set question, no stimulus [25], usually 'Evaluate' or 'Discuss'.
Topic 8.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Social structures and institutions
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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