William Fielding Ogburn (June 29, 1886 – April 27, 1959) was an Americansociologist who was born inButler, Georgia and died inTallahassee, Florida.[1][2] He was also astatistician and aneducator. Ogburn received hisB.A. degree fromMercer University and hisM.A. andPh.D. degrees fromColumbia University.[3] He was a professor of sociology at Columbia from 1919 until 1927, when he became chair of the Sociology Department at theUniversity of Chicago.
He served as the president of theAmerican Sociological Society in 1929. He was theeditor of theJournal of the American Statistical Association from 1920 to 1926. In 1931, he was elected as the president of theAmerican Statistical Association, which also elected him as aFellow in 1920.[4] He was also known for his idea of "Cultural lag" in society's adjustment to technological and other changes. He was elected to theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1932.[5] He played a pivotal role in producing the groundbreaking Recent Social Trends during his research directorship of PresidentHerbert Hoover's Committee on Social Trends from 1930 to 1933. He was elected to theAmerican Philosophical Society in 1940.[6]
He was one of the most prolific sociologists of his time, with 175 articles under his name.
Perhaps Ogburn's most enduring intellectual legacy is the theory of social change he offered in 1922.[7] He suggested that technology is the primary engine of progress, but tempered by social responses to it. Thus, his theory is often considered a case ofTechnological determinism, but is really more than that. Ogburn posited four stages of technical development: invention, accumulation, diffusion and adjustment.
Invention is the process by which new forms of technology are created. Inventions are collective contributions to an existing cultural base that cannot occur unless the society has already gained a certain level of knowledge and expertise in the particular area.Accumulation is the growth of technology because new things are invented more rapidly than old ones are forgotten, and some inventions (such as writing) promote this accumulation process.Diffusion is the spread of an idea from one cultural group to another, or from one field of activity to another, and as diffusion brings inventions together, they combine to form new inventions.Adjustment is the process by which the non-technical aspects of a culture respond to invention, and any retardation of this adjustment process causescultural lag.
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