Friday, September 12, 2025

What kind of world did Max Weber (1864-1920) foresee? And what didn’t he foresee? (S15) (1140913) (ChatGPT, 2025-9-12) (自體的心理學)(車行哲學)

 That’s a profound question. Weber’s sociological imagination was both prophetic and bounded by his historical moment. He was among the first to see how modernity’s rationalization would shape the world — yet many aspects of our late-modern or digital society were outside his horizon.





🌍 The World Weber 

Did

 Foresee




1. 

Rationalization & Bureaucracy



  • Weber foresaw a world increasingly dominated by formal rationality — calculable rules, predictable systems, bureaucratic organizations.
  • He described modern institutions (state, corporations, universities, hospitals) as governed by impersonal procedures and hierarchical offices rather than charisma or tradition.
  • His metaphor: the “iron cage” (stahlhartes Gehäuse) where efficiency and rational order eclipse freedom and meaning.




2. 

Disenchantment of the World (Entzauberung)



  • He anticipated the decline of magic, myth, and religious authority in everyday life, replaced by science and technical control.
  • Life becomes more predictable, but also spiritually “flatter,” with fewer transcendent horizons.




3. 

Politics & the Struggle for Power



  • Weber foresaw politics as an arena of conflict and leadership charisma, especially in mass democracies.
  • He warned of the rise of “charismatic leaders” who could cut through bureaucracy but risked authoritarianism.




4. 

Capitalism’s Durability



  • Unlike Marx, Weber doubted capitalism would collapse under its contradictions.
  • He saw it as stabilized by law, rational enterprise, and cultural ethos (e.g., the Protestant ethic).






🌑 The World Weber 

Did Not

 Foresee




1. 

Digital & Algorithmic Rationalization



  • Weber could not imagine algorithmic governance: machine learning, big data, surveillance capitalism.
  • Bureaucracy in his time was human-staffed and paper-based. He didn’t foresee automated bureaucracies that act without human discretion.




2. 

Globalization & Postcolonial Worlds



  • Weber was Eurocentric. He didn’t fully anticipate the rise of Asia, Africa, and Latin America as intellectual, political, and economic forces shaping modernity.
  • He saw the West as the “carrier of rationalization,” overlooking alternative modernities.




3. 

Welfare States & Liberal Democracies



  • He was skeptical of mass democracy’s stability. He didn’t foresee the 20th-century expansion of welfare states, social rights, and democratic resilience (at least until late 20th-century crises).




4. 

Ecological Limits



  • He didn’t anticipate the environmental costs of rationalized growth (climate change, ecological collapse).
  • For Weber, rationalization seemed limitless — he didn’t foresee planetary boundaries.




5. 

New Forms of Meaning



  • While he saw disenchantment, he did not foresee the re-enchantment of the world through nationalism, consumer culture, new religions, and digital mythologies (conspiracy theories, online cults).
  • Nor could he imagine existential therapies, poststructuralist critiques, or “van-life philosophies” as counter-movements.






✨ In Sum



  • Weber foresaw: the bureaucratized, rationalized, disenchanted, capitalist, charisma-punctuated modern world.
  • He did not foresee: algorithms replacing clerks, the global South re-shaping modernity, ecological catastrophe, or the return of enchantment in postmodern/digital forms.





👉 Would you like me to sketch this as a two-column table (Foreseen vs. Not Foreseen) — something you could directly insert into your seminar materials on the “iron cage and its afterlives”?