Borachio
Way past lunacy
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2012
- Messages
- 26,698
Twas a simple joke.What?
Max Weber was the guy who came up with this idea to describe something that supposedly already existed. He claimed - in a much more drawn-out argument - that capitalistic societies and, correlatively, strong economies grew up in places where Protestantism was a strong element of the local culture: Britain, Scandinavia, Germany, the United States. He then went on to explain this phenomenon by an analysis of a work ethic that was supposedly unique to Protestant societies.
The problem is that capitalistic societies and strong economies were actually not all that strongly associated with Protestantism even in the early stages of the industrial revolution. Belgium, one of the most industrialized states on Earth, was notably very Catholic, and the motor of industry in Germany was the strongly-papist Rhineland. France, of course, was a heavily industrialized society early on as well. Industrialization in America didn't necessarily have anything to do with Protestantism; most of the big industrial cities had strong Catholic populations as well, like New York, Chicago, and Boston. Northern Italy is also a strong counterexample, as is the general lack of industrialization in some places that were very strongly Protestant at the time Weber published, such as Denmark.
Weber hypothesized a Protestant work ethic to explain a phenomenon that did not, in fact, exist, even when he wrote about it.
Yes, indeed. I'd say that's all largely true.
The question remains, though, and I've not seen it answered (probably because by the time it had occurred to me to ask, I'd lost all interest in sociology), is why Weber came up with the idea. I do believe he'd heard of Belgium, France and Italy.