172 THE SOCIAL THEORY OF GEORG SIMMEL
system are objective structures relatively independent of
the individual priest, civil servant, or merchant. As indi-
viduals, they carry out the functions which these struc-
tures possess as organs of the group, but they do not pro-
duce them. Although the bearers of the special social
structures, they remain none the less subject to the group
as a whole and to the special conditions which the func-
tioning activity of these organs imposes upon the group as
a whole. The merchant must buy the articles of his per-
sonal use, the judge is subject to law, the tax-collector to
taxes, and the priest to confession. But over and above
their individual elements, these special organs embody
and objectify the forces that hold the group together.
They further consolidate the group elements into a unit
and give to the group coherence, apart from its functional
aspect, an objective structural existence.
The formation of special organs has great advantages
and contributes considerably to a better preservation of
the group. It permits a greater flexibility in policies and a
quicker and more efficient adaptation to changing con-
ditions. The transference of special functions to smaller
groups opens the possibility for the use of expert knowledge
and a higher average intelligence, while, on the other hand,
it reduces the dangers of emotional excesses resulting from
increased collective suggestibility.!
These specialized structures for the fulfilment of spe-
cific social functions contribute, therefore, greatly to the
preservation of the group. But, on the other hand, this
preservation also requires that the differentiated organs
shall not attain complete independence. They serve their
purpose only if they remain structural condensations of the
formerly direct reciprocities between the elements of the
larger group. They fulfil their function only if they give
L Soz., pp. 537-56.