INTRODUCTORY
23
as an organic whole does not lend itself
to analysis. By the statement that society
is an organic whole is meant that no one
set of human actions can be regarded as
wholly unconnected with any other set
of human actions taking place in the same
community. Each society, it is asserted—
and we may allow at once rightly asserted—
presents an organized system of activities
covering all that happens at one time and
reaching backwards into the past and for
wards into the future. A simple illustration
can readily be furnished. My demand for a
particular ^ book to-day—say, for Pareto’s
Cours cTEconomie Politique, which at the
time that I write is out of print—is
dependent (a) upon my possession of other
things, which gives to this want the oppor
tunity of expressing itself, or may even be
partially responsible for its existence ; (b)
upon my education and circumstances in
the past ; (c) upon my ideas and deter
minations as regards my future ; and
(d) upon the tastes, acquirements and
possessions of my fellows. This being
so, to take out the demand in question
and try to study it as an independent
specimen is to imply an atomistic view of
social functioning which is in conflict with