An Explication and Application of Max Weber's Theoretical Construct Of

An Explication and Application of Max Weber's Theoretical Construct Of

An Explication and Application of Max Weber’s Theoretical Construct of Verstehen Patrick Gann, MSW, Ph.D. candidate Millersville University School of Social Work [email protected] Journal of Social Work Values and Ethics, Volume 14, Number 2 (2017) Copyright 2017, ASWB This text may be freely shared among individuals, but it may not be republished in any medium without express written consent from the authors and advance notification ofASWB. Abstract understanding, known best by its original German At the turn of the twentieth century, sociologists name Verstehen. debated epistemologies especially as they related to people, whether groups or individuals. Today’s social Life and Work of Max Weber, in workers can benefit from a deeper understanding Brief of “Verstehen,” or “interpretive understanding,” Born in 1864, Karl Emil Maximilian Weber as it both combats scientific positivism and values was a prominent German academic, operating in cultural competence. the fields of philosophy, sociology, and economics. Considering the time and place of his birth, Weber Keywords: Weber, verstehen, cultural competence, came one generation after Karl Marx, and he was theory, epistemology a contemporary to Emile Durkheim and Sigmund Freud. He died in Germany in 1920, meaning he Introduction witnessed the Great War (World War I) in its en- Participants in the social science disci- tirety. He also witnessed the peak of the industrial plines—anthropology, psychology, social work, so- revolution. ciology, and others—rely on theoretical constructs Because Weber was interested in philoso- to better inform their continued work, whether in phy as it applied to society, he familiarized himself research or practice. Among those of us who op- with the work of Immanuel Kant, and would later erate in the field of social work, we tend to favor identify himself as, at least partially, a Neo-Kantian certain theoretical constructs, and their subsequent (Kim, 2012). Throughout the course of his many therapeutic models, over others. This is especially writings, Weber would try to find a place for the so for those theoretical constructs that operate best rational positivists—those who believed that all in the realm of direct, micro practice: Piaget’s cog- things can be known and fully quantified. Ultimate- nitive development theory, Freud’s psychodynamic ly, he was unable to do so, and his resonance with theory, Kohlberg’s stages of moral development. Kant’s nominalism led him to develop the concept Other theoretical constructs offer social of Verstehen. workers a broader framework, one that can bridge Throughout Weber’s life, he was active in the micro-macro divide. These so-called alterna- collaborative—or some might say, competitive— tive constructs may not be used as often in daily scholarship with his peers. He was a well-known practice, but their appropriate use may guide social public figure, and at the end of the Great War, post- workers to new solutions, and new conclusions. In war Germany looked to Weber for answers. Un- this article, the author will explore the nature and fortunately, as Kim notes, Weber’s “stark political practical applications of Max Weber’s interpretive realism” led him to state that he had no answers Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics, Fall 2017, Vol. 14, No. 2 - page 30 An Explication and Application of Max Weber’s Theoretical Construct of Verstehen for the people (2012). The Gemeinde, or commu- philosophy as much ground as possible, but in the nity, would have to find their own way in a new, end, he had to join with anti-positivist thought to open political marketplace. Had Weber lived lon- acknowledge the complex creature that is the hu- ger, he would have seen the result of the struggle: man. In one of his later (posthumous) works, Econ- The Third Reich. omy and Society, Weber (1978) writes: Verstehen All interpretation of meaning, like The literal translation of the word Verste- all scientific observations, strives hen is “understanding” in its noun form, or “(to) for clarity and verifiable accuracy understand” in verb form. By itself, verstehen is an of insight and comprehension. The extremely common word in German, as much as basis for certainty in understand- “understanding” is in English. However, when Max ing can be either rational, [...] or it Weber began using the word, he had in mind a par- can be of an emotionally empathic ticular meaning with its own parameters. The first or artistically appreciative quality. step to Verstehen is, thus to understand what he who [...] Empathic or appreciative accu- coined the term meant when he called on others to racy is attained when, through sym- understand (verstehen) the word Verstehen. pathetic participation, we can ade- One way to approach Verstehen is to con- quately grasp the emotional context sider the levels of knowledge implicit in the Ger- in which the action took place. [...] man language. The English verb “(to) know” can On the other hand, many ultimate be translated by two separate verbs in German: ends or values toward which experi- wissen and kennen. The former can only be used ence shows that human action may to describe one’s knowledge of facts, concepts, and be oriented, often cannot be under- ideas. The latter is reserved for when one knows a stood completely, though sometimes person, when one knows their way around a city, we are able to grasp them intellec- or generally to express familiarity. The former is tually. The more radically they dif- great for positivist forms of knowledge: memorized fer from our own ultimate values, facts, mathematical formulae, etc. It would be in- however, the more difficult it is for correct to say “Ich weiss dich” (I [factually know] us to understand them empathically. you), just as it would be incorrect to say “Ich kenne Depending upon the circumstances Regen” (I [familiarly know] rain)—though the lat- of the particular case we must be ter might be used for poetic effect. The latter begins content either with a purely intellec- to lead us to what drew Weber to coin his own usage tual understanding of such values or of Verstehen. when even that fails, sometimes we The very language Weber spoke, then, sug- must simply accept them as given gested that human individuals cannot be quantified. data. (pp. 5-6, emphasis added) They cannot be known in the same way one knows Here Weber makes plain that a paradox lies the periodic table of the elements. And, though some in the nature of Verstehen: To understand one anoth- futurists hope to someday quantify the data in the er, we must acknowledge that we will never fully un- human brain, and scientists have already mapped derstand one another. For twenty-first century social the human genome, Weber’s analysis remains true workers, Weber’s statement above resonates with for the present. If positivism cannot apply to the ideas around cultural competence, compassion, and individual, then, how much less so would it apply empathy. True empathy can never be fully attained, to collections of humanity: communities, cities, na- because we can never fully adopt the perspective of tion-states? Weber struggled to give the positivist another person or group of people. Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics, Fall 2017, Vol. 14, No. 2 - page 31 An Explication and Application of Max Weber’s Theoretical Construct of Verstehen The goal in learning to understand that and social workers in the nursing home are from not which we do not understand is surrendering the just the same region, but the same city (Glasgow) notion that there is an end in sight, and to practice as the residents. Nonetheless, Quickfall acknowl- what Weber’s translators would later call Verstehen: edges that if they do not use cultural competence as interpretive understanding. Whether considering a starting point to address weaknesses, unlearn bi- the concept of “participant observation” in cultur- ases (such as ageism), and treat every individual as al anthropology, “Human Action” in sociology, or someone new and different, not based on a simple “cultural competence” as noted above, all streams mold or pattern, better care can be achieved. lead back to the anti-positivist source of Verste- hen. It is worth noting that, in terms of vocabulary The macro lens alone, Weber would likely not recognize the many When Verstehen jumps from micro to mac- branches Verstehen has gone since he planted the ro, the language changes in modern English from seed and allowed it to take root. But, given some “interpretive understanding” to “interpretive soci- time to contemplate, we can imagine that he would, ology.” In 1967, Alfred Schutz developed new ap- as our academic disciplines have, be able to see and plications for Weber’s work with his publication build the connections. “The Phenomenology of the Social World” (Rob- bins, Chatterjee, & Canda, 2012). Shutz argued Analysis and Applications in that too many sociologists were using Verstehen in Modern Social Work an introspective way, applying it to the individual How does Verstehen help shape and inform level only. In his own model, which Robbins et al. practice in social work today? The obvious answers describe as “extremely complex,” Shutz speaks of have already been stated: Verstehen acknowledges the world in terms of objects and inanimate struc- our inability fully to understand one another, and at tures (“umwelt”) and the social world, the world of the same time demands we follow certain practices person-to-person interaction (“mitwelt”) (p. 326). to know best, in the kennen sense, other people. First, The purpose of differentiating these two worlds was let us consider what this looks like in direct practice. to allow us to considering not just the interactions The following example utilizes a “host” environment within the mitwelt, but also the interactions between for social workers, a nursing home, but its universal mitwelt and umwelt, and how the mitwelt-only inter- application is made plain.

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