The big idea: You queue without being told. You lower your voice in a library. You call some people 'family' and some 'strangers'.
No one handed you a rulebook — yet everyone around you plays by the same patterns. Those patterns are what social philosophy calls social structures, and the big ones with names and rules are social institutions.
A social structure is the shape a group of people settles into; a social institution is a big, named version of that shape — marriage, law, school, money.
Hold onto this: Structures aren't buildings or people — they're patterns. You can't point at 'the law' the way you point at a chair, yet it shapes almost everything you do.
Free preview
This is the free notes preview
You're reading the free notes. Aimnova Pro unlocks the full study experience — and you can try it free for 7 days:
- FlashcardsLock in vocabulary and key terms with spaced repetition.
- Practice questionsAnswer exam-style questions and get instant AI marking.
- Mock exams & past-paper vaultSit full mocks and see exactly how examiners award marks.
- Personalised study planA daily plan built around your exam date and weak areas.
The first useful split is between structures that are written down and structures that just grow.
Two ways a pattern holds: Marriage and the law are formal: they have official rules, records, and someone with the power to enforce them. Friendship is informal: no one signs a friendship contract, yet it has real expectations — loyalty, keeping in touch — that you feel keenly when they're broken. Both are structures; they just hold together in different ways, one by written rule and one by shared habit.
Checkpoint — formal vs informal: In one line: formal structures hold by written rule and enforcement (marriage, law); informal ones hold by shared habit and expectation (friendship).
Know your predicted grade
Take timed mock exams and get detailed feedback on every answer. See exactly where you're losing marks.
Two questions from the guide sharpen the idea, and they pull in different directions.
Is 'community' different from 'society'?
- Community: warm, close, shared bonds — a village, a team
- Society: larger, cooler, held by rules — a whole nation
- Debate: two truly different things, or just small vs large?
Can an institution be an 'agent'?
- We say 'the school decided', 'the state acted'
- Yes: it makes choices no single member made
- No: only the people inside it really act
Go further — higher-level insight: Spot the two readings of 'community'. The German sociologist Ferdinand Tönnies split them: Gemeinschaft (community — bound by feeling and belonging) versus Gesellschaft (society — bound by rules and self-interest). Naming that distinction — and asking whether they're really two things or two ends of one scale — is a top-band move.
Checkpoint — society and agency: In one line: 'community' feels bound by belonging while 'society' is bound by rules — and when an institution 'acts', it does something shared that no single member did alone.