Suicide: A Study in Sociology (1897) is arguably Émile Durkheim’s most famous book. After reading it, I can add to this: it’s also his most clearest book. That is, clear in the sense that it exposes Durkheim’s perspective on the then newly founded science sociology. Why? Because Durkheim distinguished himself from contemporary social scientists with his principle of emergence (my own terms). According to Durkheim, society has laws of its own, inexplicable in terms of the psychology of individuals. Around the time, most social scientists saw sociology as mass psychology – understanding the human mind would lead to us understanding how societies function.
Durkheim breaks with this sociology-as-mass-psychology perspective, since he claimed in his two earlier works that sociology is the study of social facts. These social facts emerge out of the interaction of all the individuals in a given society, and the social structure of this particular society (how individuals relate to each other). Explanation consists of the causal relationship between multiple social facts; social facts can only be explained in terms of other social facts, not in terms of individual manifestations of these social facts.
This sounds a lot like the claim of medieval theologians that universals (abstractions of particulars) have an existence of their own. Where and in what these universals consist of would never be explained. Colleagues of Durkheim, predictably, called him a medieval metaphysician, since the resemblance between his social facts and the medial universals is clear. Why were they wrong to label Durkheim in this way? Well, in a science, all of science is founded on emergence – you can’t explain chemical processes purely in terms of atoms, just like you can’t explain human psychological functions in terms of biology. Ultimately, each science works with its own building blocks and its own laws.
(Although not all scientists and philosophers of science agree with this. Reductionism – the golden ideal of reducing a given science fully into terms of a more fundamental science – has its proponents. Some of the most renowned physicists and biologists are reductionists; and reductionism has done much good for science.)
In Suicide, Durkheim is able to fully explain his sociological perspective using the example of suicide. Suicide, he notes in book 1, has always been explained in terms of the individual. The suicide is deemed to be a lunatic, an alcoholic, a melancholy/depressed person – and is studied by the psychologist. And if not, other circumstantial factors are considered, such as climatic conditions (heat would arouse the passions); celestial movements (seasonal effects); racial or genetic vulnerabilities; etc. Durkheim uses suicide statistics to show that none of these causes holds true. The only thing he finds is that suicide rates vary with the seasons, increasing towards the summer and decreasing towards December. But, he sees the increase of social activity as the underlying cause. Why this is so, he explains in book 2.
The second book of Suicide is dedicated to understand suicide as a social fact. Individual and environmental factors are now ruled out, so Durkheim starts to study suicide on the level of society. By studying the changes in the rates of suicide in different European countries in relation to different social facts, he is able to distinguish three types of suicide – each with its own social cause and its own peculiar vulnerable group of persons.
The first type Durkheim mentions is ‘egoistic suicide’. This type of suicide is due to the individualization of society. As collectivism decreased (in which personal identity doesn’t exist) and the ‘religion of the individual’ started to spread, the focus of people turned onto themselves. Certain groups of people, like artists and intellectuals, have such developed intellects, that their minds are almost completely cut off from the social world. In ultimo, these people only have an ‘ego’ and no social relations. This group of people is heavily susceptible to suicide due to melancholy and nihilistic feelings.
The second type of suicide is ‘altruistic suicide’. This is suicide in which an individual kills himself because he doesn’t recognize his own personality – all that exists is the social group. This mind-set is typical of collectivistic societies (primitive societies in which group survival has to be secured), but it is also highly cultivated in armies. Somewhat counter-intuitively, this ‘altruism’ increases with ones status in the army – the higher you are up the chain, and the longer you have been part of the army, the more you have discarded your own ‘ego’ and the more important the honour of the flag becomes. Durkheim proves his point by showing that ‘time served in the army’ and ‘rank’ both correlate positively with suicide rates.
The last type of suicide Durkheim finds, he labels ‘anomic suicide’. Anomy, according to Durkheim, is sudden de-regulation – the sudden falling away of rules and laws on which one based his or her life. Modern western societies, due to industrialization, globalism and capitalism have become highly differentiated and also highly volatile. Business and exchange cycles are continuously fluctuating between booms and busts. Economic crises break out (on average) each seven years and are followed by both sudden bankruptcies and sudden profits. Each time a crisis hits, people fall down or climb the social ladder – this leads to anomy: suddenly one finds oneself in a new social group, to which one isn’t socialized and in which one hardly finds acceptance. Durkheim shows the cogency of his thesis by establishing the increasing suicide rates after each political or economic event – the interesting thing to note here is that change is the driving factor, not the positivity/negativity of the change. Whether a war is won or lost, the nation’s suicide rate will increase.
But this is not all. If anomy – the sudden loss of regularity and discipline – is a social force driving suicide rates up, then it would follow that divorce would also impact suicide rates. And this is what Durkheim manages to establish using statistics. While the suicide rate tends to be higher for unmarried people, after a divorce the suicide rate for men tends to skyrocket. For women it is the opposite: marriage increases suicide rates for women, while divorce lowers it.
This part of book 2 contains Durkheim’s most contested and controversial claims. Many feminists, and academics in general, nowadays claim this is sexist science. To be fair, let’s quote Durkheim’s explanation: men are more influenced by the activity around them (requiring the discipline of marriage), while women are more influenced by their own passions (requiring the freedom of unmarried life). But facts don’t care about feelings. Modern day psychology has established that men tend to benefit more from being in a relationship (and suffer more from bachelorhood) – e.g. the impact of relationship status on mental health is much bigger for men. Also, on average, men are much more socially active (including aggressive and competitive) while women are much more emotion-driven. The suicide rates for depressed men is tremendously higher than for women, while both suffer equally from depression – there’s definitely an activity/aggression factor involved here. Same goes for criminality, etc.
Anyway, in the last book (3) of Suicide, Durkheim tries to explain the nature of suicide as a social fact. The general message is: due to the inductive method, we now have three types of suicide, which have to be analysed as social phenomena in their own terms. Each society has a different mix of egoism, altruism and anomy, and thus each society has its own characteristic suicidogenic potential. Suicide rates thus tend to vary between nations and different social changes lead to different types of suicide rates rising or falling. Individual factors are irrelevant from the social perspective – whether the suicide was an alcoholic, melancholic, a criminal or whatever is not important.
This, by the way, leads to the philosophical debate of free will vs. determinism. Durkheim rightly states that statistical facts do not determine individual cases. Of course, he didn’t have the statistical tools we nowadays have, but still he manages to explain why (for example) the average length is a social fact sui generis and how this doesn’t determine the length of any individual in a given society. And with this rebuttal, Durkheim also has silenced his colleagues who called him a medieval metaphysician: social facts exist sui generis, we can observe, measure and analyse them, and there’s nothing metaphysical about this.
The last two chapters Durkheim spends on the question of the immorality of suicide and how we can decrease the suicide rates in the European nations. First, suicide is a normal social phenomenon, just like crime is a normal social phenomenon. This led to much controversy at the time, because – just like today – people moralize scientific statements. Human nature is flawed so crime will always exist; just like penal laws and punishments will always exist. Punishment is a means of restoring social contract and strengthening the bonds between the members of society. And in the same vein, suicide will always exist.
But is it immoral? Durkheim says it is. But not on grounds that religious and collectivist adepts have claimed throughout history (for example, life is God’s gift so suicide is a sin). In modern societies we have sanctified the individual; we deem the individual human being to be worth something (a lot). Any suicide offends this principle and hence acts immoral. It’s interesting to note here that Durkheim acknowledges that the principle itself (a human life is worth much) can’t be defended – it is unfounded – yet a member of a modern western society has to accept it as a useful fiction to function properly.
So, suicide is normal yet immoral. Yet, the nineteenth century showed gigantic increases (in some countries some hundredfold) in suicide rates. These huge increases are, according to Durkheim, symptomatic of a sick social organism. Something has changed recently which makes thousands of people give up their own lives. It can’t be altruism, since collectivism has been almost fully eradicated (even in the army).
For Durkheim, both egoism and anomy have increased a lot with the new social structure and are the main causes of the huge rises in suicide rates all over Europe. Individuation has been speeding up with new means of communication and transport, while capitalism and industrialization has drawn millions of Europeans to cities and destroyed all forms of associations, save for the nation-state. In fact, the State is the only remaining institution that connects all individuals, and while its centralization has sped up since the French Revolution (which build on the centralized Ancien Régime) it has become less and less effective. Decentralization is no alternative, since decentralized government still doesn’t associate individuals in a meaningful way (especially when forced from above due to reasons of efficiency).
Durkheim claims that religion, politics and the state are no remedies to the extreme individuation and loss of meaning. These institutions all had their time and place, but one cannot throw mankind back into ‘unknowing’ – e.g. religion without the belief in an active God is ineffective. In theory, education might be an option in but, in practice, it relies on the current generation – which is already individuated to a high degree – to turn the tide. For Durkheim, the only viable alternative is the creation of new, intermediate (between state and individual) social institutions that bind people together. He claims corporations formed around professions are a good bulwark against individuation and hence suicide. When people associate around the one meaningful thing left to them – their profession – and try to improve their lot together and within a hierarchical structure, order and purpose is restored, up to a point. Durkheim is pessimistic about the viability of this option, though, since he recognizes this would require both the toleration of the state and its business elites as well as the will of the people themselves.
At the end of the book, he even claims the family as a social unit is the only real factor left that could increase social cohesion and hence decrease the rates of egoistic and anomic suicides. But this seems to be problematic as well. When it comes to marriage, there’s a huge zero-sum game involved. Women’s rights (divorce) had been developing in Europe for some time, leading to increased suicide rates of men. But reversing this trend would lead to increasing suicide rates of women. Marriage, then, seems to be a saviour for men and a killer for women. Should society sacrifice the one sex for the other?
So, like Plato, Durkheim ends his book in an aporia, in which much delusion is cleared up but we’re not much nearer to a solution. But this analogy is a bit unfair; Plato wrote for the sake of dialectic, while Durkheim wrote to put his sociology into practice. While his data set was flawed and his statistical tools very limited, when it came to deducing arguments and deriving effective hypotheses, Suicide truly is a landmark treatise.
For me, the most important lessons are:
1. Society has its own free floating rationale, which developed over time and which is almost immune to individual influence. So, when it comes to such social facts as crime and suicide, we have individual emotions and opinions, while society as a whole has its own opinions. These two coexist and are bound to be confounded when individuals are confronted with social events (e.g. we feel enrages when a crime befalls a loved one, while society is much more nuanced, and we subsequently feel that punishment is much too weak.)
2. We tend to think that we, as individuals, are free to do and feel as we wish, but there are developments and influences on a more abstract level that guide and predispose us in certain ways. Durkheim mentions the pessimistic philosophies of Schopenhauer and Hartmann as sign of the times – a moody, depressed and dreary society is characterized pessimistic and nihilistic emotions. It is hard to escape this social mood as an individual. (Durkheim also mentions that only in a collapsing Athenian city-state/Greece could the stoicism of a Zeno or the nihilism of an Epicurus take hold of society.)
3. While thinking of society as an organism is a flawed analogy, it also offers us a new pair of glasses through which to view our own society and observe new phenomena. Ultimately, I am a sceptic when it comes to societies existing as entities and following certain laws or paths (whether cyclical, ascending or descending). But after reading Durkheim’s Suicide – not to mention his prior two works – I can more fully grasp the meaning in which people like Spengler thought about societies and their developmental paths.
I always associated Durkheim with a pseudo-conservative, but after reading Suicide I can fully attest to his progressive stance on things and his pragmatism in solving social ills. I can see why people would put him in the ‘conservative corner’, with his emphasis on the importance of the family as a social unit, his pessimism about the way modern western society was developing and, especially, his critique on the ‘religion of the individual’. But he also acknowledges clearly that religion, politics and the state are things of the past – at least when it comes to creating meaningful social bonds – and that we have to look for new solutions for new problems. Also, his atheistic stance makes it difficult to place him in the conservative camp.
(This is very similar to the way liberals always seem to use Adam Smith and David Riccardo to strengthen their ideology. Adam Smith offered his free market approach as an alternative to the guilds and the mercantilism of the kingdoms and republics of the eighteenth century, while also warning for the de-humanizing effects of industrialism and free market enterprise – he actually wrote a whole treatise on how human beings sympathize with each other and how this sympathy is a basic human need.)
In short, Durkheim was someone who wanted to understand society based on facts and who wanted to use science and reason to cure some of the ills of modern day western society. Suicide is a beautiful testimony on this.
(p.s. I can fill this review with countless critiques on the quality of his data; on the ways he made use of this flawed data set; and on some of his hasty conclusions; but I think it more fruitful to emphasize the radical shift that sociology took with Durkheim’s approach.)