CHAPTER I
THE FUNDAMENTAL ERROR IN MODERN SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY
Science during the middle of this century excited popular interest mainly on account of its bearing on the doctrines of Christianity • 3
Its popularity is now beginning to depend on its bearing not on religious problems, but on social • 3
Science itself is undergoing a corresponding change • 4
Its characteristic aim during the middle of the century was to deal with physical and physiological evolution • 4
Its characteristic aim now is to deal with the evolution of society • 5
Social science itself is not wholly new • 5
What is new is the application to it of the evolutionary theory • 6
This excites men by suggesting great social changes in the future, • 7
which will give a speculative meaning to the history of humanity, • 8
or secure for men now existing, or for their children, practical social advantages • 8
Men have thus a double reason for being interested in social science, and sociologists a double reason for studying it; • 9
and it has attracted a number of men of genius, who have applied to it methods learned in the school of physical science • 9
Yet despite their genius and their diligence, all parties complain that the results of their study are inconclusive • 10
Professor Marshall and Mr. Kidd, for instance, complain of the fact, but can suggest no explanation of it • 10
What can the explanation be? • 11
The answer will be found in the fact just referred to—that social science attempts to answer two distinct sets of questions; • 12
and one set—namely, the speculative—it has answered with great success; • 12
it has failed only in attempting to answer practical questions • 13
Now the phenomena with which it has dealt successfully are phenomena of social aggregates, considered as wholes; • 13
but the practical problems of to-day, with which it has dealt unsuccessfully, arise out of the conflict between different parts of aggregates • 15
Social science has failed as a _practical_ guide because it has not recognised this distinction; • 16
and hence arise most of the errors of the political philosophy of this century • 16