The Human Person in Society Module 7.1 Module 7: The Human Person in Society Review
What is the purpose of
intersubjectivity? How will you explain human person is not just being-in-the-world but being-in-relation? Opening Prayer Life Performance Outcome: Courageous, Resourceful EXPLORERS & PROBLEM SOLVERS Essential Performance Element:
Resolutely understand, address
and resolve issues or problems of their communities • Core Program Outcomes Persist in the face of resistance to their efforts to teach peace, reduce violence and redness the harm being levied against others. (thematic and experiential). • Performance Standard The learner evaluates the formation of human relationships and how individuals are shaped by their social contexts • Content Standard The learner understands the interplay between the individuality of human beings and their social contexts HOOK
What are the different forms of
societies? Is it possible for a nation not have all types of societies and individuals within the social system? Why ? Why not? (MELC) Competencies 7.1 Recognize how individuals form societies and how individuals are transformed by societies 7.2 Compare different forms of societies and how individuals are transformed by societies (e.g. Agrarian, industrial and virtual) 7.3 Explain how human relations are transformed by social systems 7.4 Evaluate the transformation of human relationships by social systems and how societies transform individual human beings How will you recognize individuals from societies? How individuals are transformed by societies? According to German Sociologist Franz Oppenheimer (1992, xiv) • Society can be understood as referring to the totality of all natural relations and institutions between man and man. The size and scope differs. • Example: A small group of academic scholars – society; while we also speak of society on the level of country or state (Philippine or American Societies). Guide Questions • Have you ever pondered how your world has defined you? • Have you ever thought about your place in this world and among the people you interact with everyday? • Have you ever reelected on how your presence has affected the world and people around you? What are those different forms of society? • Hunting or gathering Society • Pastoral Society • Horticultural Society • Agricultural Society • Industrial Society • Post –Industrial Society Hunting and Gathering societies? • Depends on what nature provides for their subsistence. Example: Hunt and gather fruits, nuts, roots, and other edible plant based food. • People in these societies are nomadic. • These societies are usually small in number and their composition or membership is fluid. • Decision-making is thus made by all members of the group. Hunting and Gathering societies Pastoral Societies?
• Domestication and herding of animals.
• Membership in pastoral societies is greater compared to that of hunting and gathering animals. • Not as nomadic as those in hunting and gathering societies. Horticultural societies?
• Cultivation of fruits, vegetables, and plants
using hand tools. • People in the horticultural societies also tend to be less nomadic and bigger in number. • There is a surplus of food in these societies, they also have a hierarchical social structure of division of labor. Agricultural societies? • Cultivation of crops, including corn, wheat, and rice, but this time using a mixture of human and nonhuman means, specially by using animals and the plow to cultivate fields. • A more complex form of hierarchical social structure as social classes (slave and masters or landowners). • These societies are usually large (with members sometimes reaching into the millions). Industrial societies? • Arise primarily as a result of the industrial revolution which started with the invention of the steam engine by James Watt in or around 1769 in England. • The use of mechanical means (machines and chemical processes) for the production of goods, instead of human and animal physical power. • People survive by working in industries that combine science and technology with the utilization of energy to run machines. • People in these societies have a greater chance of improving their situation in life. Post Industrial societies? • Arise from the use of electronic manipulation and transmission of information. • The primary means of subsistence is doing service-oriented work in the industries, like finance, healthcare, business or sales, and education. • These societies as the Information Age. Post Industrial societies? Soren Keikegaard
“Our Modern age remains
an era of increasing dullness, conformity, and lack of genuine.” Key Points to Remember
1. Life was much simpler than
before. 2. Leadership and Literature was changed. 3. As Industry changed social and political conditions transformed. Key Points to Remember
4. All types of societies and
individual fall under a social System. 5. Society is a collection of individuals shaped by social relations and interactions. Essential Question
societies and how individuals are transformed by societies 7.2 Compare different forms of societies and how individuals are transformed by societies (e.g. Agrarian, industrial and virtual) Conclusion Individuals and Society need each other to function properly. Anyone would like to give his/her reflections or realizations about our lesson? Do you any more clarifications, questions? Formation / LPO
• Are you able to achieve how to be
Courageous, Resourceful EXPLORERS & PROBLEM SOLVERS in building a peaceful community? • How Resolutely are you to understand, address and resolve issues or problems in your own communities? THANK YOU! GOD BLESS! CLOSING PRAYER