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Theory of Social Dynamics

The study of the patterns, processes, and forces that cause change and stability in human societies. It focuses on the mechanics of how social structures, institutions, norms, and relationships evolve over time through mechanisms like innovation, diffusion, conflict, cooperation, and adaptation. It's more granular and mechanical than dialectics, looking at the "how" of social motion rather than the overarching philosophical conflict.
Example: Using Theory of Social Dynamics, a sociologist might study how the social media algorithm's incentive for outrage (a force) dynamically reshapes political discourse, accelerates the formation of polarized in-groups and out-groups, and destabilizes traditional media institutions, mapping the causal pathways of this digital social change.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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