Elias' Theory of Civilization

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (61):83-99 (1984)
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Abstract

The concept of “civilization” is likely to call to mind the “Great Civilizations” of world history. There is an inseparable conceptual link between the latter idea and that of “development” — an evaluative standard which is applied to societies and their material and cultural achievements, whether explicitly or implicitly. In this sense, Parsons talks about development towards Western modernity, thus adopting an explicitly evolutionist perspective; the West appears as one of a variety of great civilizations. The central variable in the process of social evolution is ‘adaptive capacity,’ defined at the macro-level

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Elias and the Frankfurt School.Artur Bogner - 1987 - Theory, Culture and Society 4 (2-3):249-285.

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