Social Stratification: Crash Course Sociology #21

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • How do different societies establish a social hierarchy? Today we’re starting our unit on social stratification, starting with four basic principles of a sociological understanding of stratification. We’ll explain open and closed systems of stratification and explore examples of different kinds of stratification systems, including caste systems and class systems.
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Komentáře • 447

  • @talei3508
    @talei3508 Před 6 lety +792

    10 minutes for my 3 hour paper tomorrow. Bless up

    • @bradleywagner2180
      @bradleywagner2180 Před 4 lety +41

      If one 10 minute video is enough for a 3 hour paper you must be in high school.

    • @christopherfowler8452
      @christopherfowler8452 Před 4 lety +30

      If 3 hours is enough to write a paper, you must be in high school..

  • @Entropicalli
    @Entropicalli Před 7 lety +181

    As a sociology student, I think this video was very well presented and offered a clear explanation of the basics of social stratification. Great to see.

  • @helenedahlsveen93
    @helenedahlsveen93 Před rokem +8

    I study social linguistics and struggled to understand class stratification. Now it makes sense to me! Thank you!

  • @shinyduke1791
    @shinyduke1791 Před 7 lety +33

    Thanks crash course sociology team for all the hard work you do to inform people on the subject but I'm not going to lie the comment section is the most fun part of the series.

  • @pirate1234567891
    @pirate1234567891 Před 7 lety +213

    But how does the adjunct professor improve speed and defense?

  • @leshleyperez5637
    @leshleyperez5637 Před rokem +5

    I will say, i am a Sociology student and your videos have helped me pass a million tests! Thank you!

  • @johnhoward1181
    @johnhoward1181 Před 4 lety +13

    i would like to see crash course do a segment on Post-Modernism. In this post-truth, post-fact era that we live in many people have turned away from reason and rationalism and have instead turned to emotionalism and tribalism. As one person stated it's now emotion versus the logos. Many have shown a great distrust in science, educators, government and modernism. I would like to know a little more about that.

  • @Roxor128
    @Roxor128 Před 7 lety +124

    I hate that phrase "pull yourself up by your bootstraps". If you've ever tried it, you'll find it's physically impossible. No matter how much force you exert, the most you'll end up doing is snapping the straps.

  • @sivawright
    @sivawright Před 5 lety +38

    Thank you for taking the Caste System in India as an example. But the thing is, it is nowhere near declining it is becoming more and more rigid every day. So, when you talk about caste, do not use the past tense. And the caste system doesn't only hold sway in rural India but plays an equal or even more significant role in urban India too.

  • @AD-rk3kl
    @AD-rk3kl Před rokem +4

    10 minutes worth 15% of my course, thank you

  • @crystalar99
    @crystalar99 Před 7 lety +106

    I really love this Crash Course series. Thank you people of Crash Course!

  • @handeljuma1713
    @handeljuma1713 Před 5 lety +19

    I appreciate the fact that you summarised what we've learnt, very professional.

  • @Ella-qj7jt
    @Ella-qj7jt Před 6 lety +11

    It's probably dumb to comment about the narrator on an educational video but I'm gonna do it anyway:
    She has such gorgeous hair!

  • @user-zp8wr8gm4c
    @user-zp8wr8gm4c Před 4 lety +7

    finally spending my time on YT wisely

  • @MakeMeThinkAgain
    @MakeMeThinkAgain Před 7 lety +15

    It would be nice if you could bring this back to Durkheim and talk about how social changes (trending toward class from cast) effects people's feelings of satisfaction and meaning.

  • @grackla1384
    @grackla1384 Před 5 lety +26

    "It still maintains a limited caste system of nobility as a legacy of the feudal system of estates," lmao CrashCourse this is the reason I have to have all your videos at 0.75 speed and with the captions on😂 Don't get me wrong though I love the info! Keep up the education!

  • @blessings2024
    @blessings2024 Před rokem +10

    Thank you for making my life easier. Your videos assuaged my concerns about all those concepts and terms I should know about the subject. Now, I have a better understanding of them.

  • @Planetbustard
    @Planetbustard Před 7 lety +367

    DON'T GO TO THE COMMENT SECTION! TURN BACK!

    • @DFloyd84
      @DFloyd84 Před 7 lety +24

      I MADE A HUGE MISTAKE!

    • @DudeWhoSaysDeez
      @DudeWhoSaysDeez Před 6 lety +21

      wait, I thought all comment sections were full of highly intellectual people who make clear and concise points

    • @adamperryofficial
      @adamperryofficial Před 5 lety

      Planetbustard Nah fam, came here for lolz

    • @joshuahedges3408
      @joshuahedges3408 Před 5 lety

      thank you

    • @tykiajerry669
      @tykiajerry669 Před 5 lety +7

      The first comment I see😂 and I shall turn back around.

  • @thecookiespartan2823
    @thecookiespartan2823 Před 7 lety +13

    The caste system is so f-ed up in almost every way, even though other class systems aren't the best at times too.

  • @raghavgautam3108
    @raghavgautam3108 Před 6 lety +13

    I appreciate the honesty with which the closed stratification of the traditional Indian society (Indian caste system was described and I agree with the fact that it still exists today!! but the Indian caste system was a result of the degradation of the merit-based open stratification present in Ancient India Called "the Varna System " it was a merit-based system which allowed social mobility. but due to the arrogance of the INDIAN CLERGY CLASS i.e Brahmans, it was reduced to a closed stratification system.

  • @m.f.3469
    @m.f.3469 Před 4 lety +2

    just read chapter 8 from macionis & plummer's introduction to sociology and THIS SUMS IT UP PERFECTLY

  • @harshvardhansharma1793
    @harshvardhansharma1793 Před 5 lety +10

    And I'm making through the semester exams because of you ❤️

  • @danielcruz4960
    @danielcruz4960 Před 7 lety +4

    For me both deserve the wealth but just the one who work deserve recognition

  • @GeorgeMaier
    @GeorgeMaier Před 7 lety +22

    This is, as could only be expected from such a short video, a simplification. For instance many scholars argue a clear distinction between stratification (drawn out based on systems of distinction) and classification (how income is generated in unequal ways) - a difference which isn't developed here. This may be in part due to the influence of American sociological traditions upon this course content. Bourdieu influenced the trajectory of European sociology more than that of America, and his work paid a great deal more attention to stratification as a non-economic (but connected) force based on social networks and the propagation of cultural taste, which translate through complex exchanges into economic value. Though Bourdieu's key weaknesses come in his lack of theorisation of capital. Here we can turn to the work of more recent scholars such as Beverly Skeggs who develop more complex models of class that are linked in important ways to stratification but also the economic models which underlie much of the social difference we experience today.

  • @user-ck1ry5br3c
    @user-ck1ry5br3c Před 9 měsíci +2

    well explained ,, makes a sociologist student's life more positive and comfortable...

  • @jaiden5941
    @jaiden5941 Před 4 lety +8

    The suggested scenario immediately brought The Great Gatsby to mind...

  • @alexkyun1365
    @alexkyun1365 Před 6 lety +9

    The best episode of Crash Course Sociology so far!

  • @robm6645
    @robm6645 Před 7 lety +231

    Social Stratification: That thing the trolls feel is threatened by these videos but are unable to articulate how or why.

    • @Entropicalli
      @Entropicalli Před 7 lety +30

      Rob McCune most of the trolls on here are threatened by any form of social discourse, especially when initiated by a female. I think MGTOW is more their speed 😂 which says a lot.

    • @taylorbrown3893
      @taylorbrown3893 Před 6 lety +2

      Rob McCune, i love you more than you could ever know right now,

    • @mr.liquifier8343
      @mr.liquifier8343 Před 4 lety +1

      You ever tried shutting up. I wanted to say to some random

  • @muhammedabdullah2893
    @muhammedabdullah2893 Před 7 lety +17

    Why so many dislikes for a free, quality, professional, educational course????

    • @SpeedlPN
      @SpeedlPN Před 7 lety +1

      because it isn't quality and educational

    • @FreeTheDonbas
      @FreeTheDonbas Před 7 lety +1

      You answered your own question.

    • @robm6645
      @robm6645 Před 7 lety +8

      Because they feel threatened by knowledge.

    • @harrybarker4370
      @harrybarker4370 Před 6 lety +3

      Because crash course is mainly watched by the white, upper middle class STEM students. Sociology is a social science, not a pure science, that exposes the lie of meritocracy that all these upper middle class geeks rely on for self esteem. I'm not saying you haven't worked hard I'm saying it's seen comparitively easier btw

  • @hani5301
    @hani5301 Před 5 lety +12

    I just love your videos... they are too clear and just so amazing

  • @thereisonlyonegodandthatis4510

    The term social inequality is the existence of social stratification , within a community, which refers to the unequal opportunities and benefits for different social roles within the society. These unequal distribution of social, political and economic assets within a social community and social trends include depending on a person's class, ethnicity, location, tradition,level of education, gender and age. Based on the individual's place in the social stratification, this depends on the person's access to resources, money, and source of income, and have a great influence on how they live their lives.

  • @null090909
    @null090909 Před 7 lety +8

    Speed and defense of teachers are underrated. 😂

  • @letuslearnenglishwithallsu6887

    Covering and presentation method
    Of charectiristics and stratification of defferent types society in a short lecture was realy nice..

  • @suchitajoshi9569
    @suchitajoshi9569 Před 5 lety +8

    Thank, for such a good lecture on social stratification

  • @syedsaadirfan
    @syedsaadirfan Před 5 lety +6

    Tommorow is my paper of sociology , this lecture helps me alot to attempt a good paper Thankyou so much

  • @sally-annesinclair8405
    @sally-annesinclair8405 Před 4 lety +4

    Great video, thanks CrashCourse! I couldn't get good grades without your videos!

  • @Leviathan1216
    @Leviathan1216 Před 4 lety +12

    I’ll rise above my station, organize your information till we rise to the occasion of our new nation...

  • @jeffreykirton1780
    @jeffreykirton1780 Před 5 lety +4

    Class system and Caste system are the same thing once you read between the lines of the unwritten laws of society.

  • @warpedmind6363
    @warpedmind6363 Před 7 lety +9

    I wish social class wasn't a 'reason' to treat someone with more or less respect.

  • @themedicinepeddler9092
    @themedicinepeddler9092 Před 7 lety +272

    Goobers: "I love science, me."
    Crash Course: "Here's important social phenomena supported by research."
    Goobers: "Science is fake actually."

    • @btdtpro
      @btdtpro Před 7 lety +20

      Since they're not really giving citations or named who worked on a lot of the research, or putting up mathematical models, or anything that lets us confirm their science, it's hard to say people disagreeing, are people disagreeing with science.
      I could give 50 people of a minority group an IQ test, and if those 50 happened to score low scores, I could say my research shows, X minority is scientifically less intelligent; but 50 is a bad sample size for large populations of people, and was their a control group, was the same test give to the groups I'm now claiming are of higher IQ than people who just scored low.
      A person needs to record their data well, and show that data, you can't just make statements, and when people question them, say that those people don't get science... in fact questioning things is about as big a part of a scientists job as proving things.
      Answers start with questions, and those answers are further refined by more questions.
      Social science is considered a soft science in many way because of the high difficulty in creating predictive models, and very often when predictive models are made in social science, the prove the opposite of what academic currently would like to be true, thus those predictive models are ignored.
      Your example, those productive in terms of making people chuckle, is not productive in terms of assessing the situations, largely do to over simplification.

    • @marcag9810
      @marcag9810 Před 7 lety +36

      btdtpro Most of what they talk about here is pretty widely accepted. You probably don't ask for citations when watching 10 minute divulgative videos about quantum field theory either but you trust they're talking about mainstream physics.

    • @noeladoe
      @noeladoe Před 7 lety +11

      Why do we bash on sociology when it does actually have research-defended observations about how recurring societal structures function, when psychology is generally accepted at face value but often has limited studies and inconclusive results? How is studying the complex mind of the individual so much more important than studying how many complex minds interact with each other?

    • @noeladoe
      @noeladoe Před 7 lety +4

      btdtpro I'm not sure where you get that people interested in the topic can't question sociological findings with valid inquiries, if they're not simply statements of disbelief and criticism.

    • @btdtpro
      @btdtpro Před 7 lety +3

      Marc AG, check out PBS Space Time, when they talk, they put equation and charts on the screen, they talk about who discovered what's being talked about.
      The stuff PBS Space Time is talking about is not just "widely accepted", they're proven with highly predictive models, but nonetheless, they include the data, cause that is how you teach people science.
      You don't tell them what to think, you show them how we got to what we currently think.
      There is a LONG list of widely accepted things that turned out to be wrong.. not to say "widely accept" in any way means wrong, but to point out that it's not a replacement for data, which can people show on screen or linked to.

  • @cathyschneider2126
    @cathyschneider2126 Před 7 lety +24

    Trolls are the lowest of the low. The proper way to deal with them is not to deal with them.

  • @elee6606
    @elee6606 Před 5 lety +5

    I like this video. It put a lot of info and explains a lot. Well presented too.

  • @yaumelepire6310
    @yaumelepire6310 Před 7 lety +1

    There was really mostly one way to move in the Feudal system of Medieval Europe: whoever you were, you could join the Clergy, become a Priest, a Monk or a Nun, that is, if you were willing to not have children or property of any kind.

  • @peaches_pie6085
    @peaches_pie6085 Před rokem

    These videos have saved my exam scores. Genuinely thank you so much

  • @NilanjanPaul
    @NilanjanPaul Před 5 lety +16

    i got sociology exam tomorrow n m done. 😶

  • @girlmeetschaos
    @girlmeetschaos Před 7 měsíci

    This video is going to save my butt for my next quiz 🤩 I was struggling with class/caste so much

  • @ritaprasad7735
    @ritaprasad7735 Před 6 lety +2

    finally understood this chapter. thnx a lot

  • @AnjishnuSau
    @AnjishnuSau Před 2 měsíci

    thanks for this video very easy to remember key definitions
    😀

  • @Unstablegroundz
    @Unstablegroundz Před 10 měsíci +1

    I think america has a sort of loophole based caste system. While its true that being apart of the underclass isnt close to being the same as untouchables, but being a felon isnt all that distant.

  • @kianacoleman2867
    @kianacoleman2867 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this crash course. It was very helpful.

  • @farhananaaz2498
    @farhananaaz2498 Před 6 lety +3

    Mam u did a tremendous job..u help me alot..tmrw is mah sessional..nd m vry stsfied by watching this video...thanks mam..

  • @tomrivlin7278
    @tomrivlin7278 Před 7 lety +10

    Class is so weird here in the UK... we have this bizarre 'deference' to people of 'higher class' (often Eton/Oxbridge grads), which explains the success of certain politicians...

    • @Pfhorrest
      @Pfhorrest Před 7 lety +7

      What really weirds me about about British notions of class is that "upper class" people can be poorer than "lower class" people, and yet still have that class relation.

    • @varana
      @varana Před 7 lety +7

      That's in part a heritage of the earlier stratification into estates (i.e. clergy, nobility, commoners). In that kind of society (usually called "medieval", though it persisted, with modifications, until the early 1800s), social stratification was _not_ congruent or dependent on wealth but on rights and privileges. While the nobility _on average_ had more wealth than commoners, of course, that didn't need to be true on an individual basis. There were very wealthy commoners (like merchants) and rather poor nobles. What distinguished them, were their estate - i.e. the rights and privileges they had inherited from birth. (That's the most frequent misconception about that three estates model. It was not based on wealth, and getting rich didn't necessarily help you into becoming nobility.)
      The British upper class is a remnant of that era that developed in the 19th century when social stratification became more open, and the more land-based nobility was regularly outperformed by the new businessmen with industrial or commerical enterprises. It's changed quite a bit in the last 100 or so years, but that's where that distinction comes from. In America, there never was a truly hereditary upper class, and socal stratification is _a lot_ more tied to personal wealth and success than in the Old World.

    • @notruescotsman777
      @notruescotsman777 Před 7 lety +6

      Absolutely, The work of Bourdieu is good on this. Class is also about culture and social capital, as well as honours and titles (which we love in the UK for some reason).

    • @FanGardinen
      @FanGardinen Před 7 lety +1

      yeee! Pierre Bourdieu! Where is Pierre Bourdieu in those videos?
      He can explain why students can be poor but still belong the future upper class.

    • @adamperryofficial
      @adamperryofficial Před 5 lety

      Tom Rivlin Things are changing slowly

  • @JamieDallas
    @JamieDallas Před 7 lety +6

    Love, love, LOVE this series!!! Meritocracy is a myth! It's a social construct that stratifies the human race and perpetuates inequality. It's counterintuitive and counterproductive to our survival as a species. "The resources of the planet are the common heritage of ALL its inhabitants." -Jacque Fresco (The Venus Project)

    • @IkeOkerekeNews
      @IkeOkerekeNews Před 7 lety +1

      Jamie Dallas
      I think a meritocracy is a great idea.

  • @man-who-sold-the-world
    @man-who-sold-the-world Před 4 lety +2

    I moved downwards since birth. Not hit rock bottom yet.

  • @WhimsicalPictures
    @WhimsicalPictures Před 7 lety +5

    That blouse is so adorable! This is my favorite Crash Course series right now; I always watch it the day it comes out! Thank you for making it! (^^)

  • @erick-gmz
    @erick-gmz Před 4 lety

    "Stratification is a characteristic of society and not a matter of individual differences."
    Ok that I can understand and agree with, either my teachers aren't doing it right or idk

  • @showcase0525
    @showcase0525 Před 7 lety +1

    There is no middle ground in open or closed systems. A mixed system is really a closed system with a large section of the country's unable to transfer into the levels of the closed system.

  • @charliebright8027
    @charliebright8027 Před 6 lety +1

    yea,missoula,mt.! do net neutrality. so we can all move up or be equal if we want in class. good theory here.

  • @studmuffin2261
    @studmuffin2261 Před 7 lety +2

    Anyone have an idea of where to get her glasses? They're awesome!

  • @lifeoftalise4390
    @lifeoftalise4390 Před rokem

    Now I can write my discussion board thank you so much

  • @marinacherry3066
    @marinacherry3066 Před 5 lety +2

    Can you please mention important authors of the theories? Like Pitirim Sorokin who was the author of the term "social mobility"🌚

  • @SP990
    @SP990 Před 4 lety +2

    So much talk of caste vs class and endogamy and the Indian caste system, but no mention of Ambedkar, the man who wrote about it all before anyone else.
    The western sociologists are quoted, but what about the others 🤔

  • @haqeeqideen1905
    @haqeeqideen1905 Před 6 lety +1

    U presented it beautifully

  • @amirelias885
    @amirelias885 Před 4 lety +2

    very nice glasses ma'am

  • @cirowatanabe9561
    @cirowatanabe9561 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you so much for these lectures

  • @jaz1756
    @jaz1756 Před 7 lety

    I really hope you talk about post-structuralism and its critiques on the structure of language and reality

  • @Daniel-mf8yn
    @Daniel-mf8yn Před 7 lety +110

    To all the people saying this is liberal bias, just look out your window. There are poor people all over the place, just ask them. Oh wait I forgot, you're too scared to leave your bubble of society, and only congregate with people of a similar race, ethnic background, and income.

    • @kapulia4888
      @kapulia4888 Před 5 lety +3

      That's false because I do congregate with individuals of different ethnic background, race, and income. Ur a liar because the people outside my window aren't homeless or poor

    • @Meeesa
      @Meeesa Před 5 lety +5

      Well, this *is* liberal bias. Try talking to those who are saying that it is. You might actually hear from a lot of people working to do good for others, and serving their community regardless of race, gender, class, blah, blah, blah.
      Oh wait...I forgot you're too busy hiding in your propaganda bubble where anyone on "the other side" is an evil bigot.

    • @xentiment6581
      @xentiment6581 Před 4 lety +2

      oh yeah because you congregate with people of all races, ethnic background and income, meaning i will see you chilling with a homeless dude, in a chinese restaurant with your half black half mexican friend or having business dinner with Bill Ghates.

  • @HIMACHALMINDS
    @HIMACHALMINDS Před 5 lety +2

    Thankyou ma'am.

  • @anirudhakumar1653
    @anirudhakumar1653 Před 7 lety +2

    I think that the next episode should come first followed by examples...

  • @s3cr3tpassword
    @s3cr3tpassword Před 7 lety +3

    How do i increase my speed and defense though.....

  • @leeoswald668
    @leeoswald668 Před 4 lety +1

    In USSR it was possible to move to any position, without a problem
    Those classes are more like types, how to distinguish people, and what are they specializing for
    You could be just a villager from a far-far settlement, and you could become the leader of some state, or even USSR if you wanted to
    Plus, party membership, anyone could assign and become the political power of the country

  • @ChrisPollitt
    @ChrisPollitt Před 7 lety

    Please explain the Income, Education, Prestige, Defense, Speed pentagon diagram. What is Defense & Speed?

    • @ChrisPollitt
      @ChrisPollitt Před 7 lety

      I see, you are attempting to be funny by mixing in role-playing game character attributes.
      (e.g. The six attributes used in D&D are Strength, Constitution, Dexterity, Intelligence, Wisdom, Charisma.)

  • @TheJamesRedwood
    @TheJamesRedwood Před 7 lety +1

    Loving the new lighting!

  • @safikulislam8465
    @safikulislam8465 Před 7 lety +1

    Very very awesome speach, u clr my confusion

    • @Tuckems
      @Tuckems Před 6 lety

      Safikul Islam Uhhhhh. WHAT?!

  • @victortellander36
    @victortellander36 Před 6 lety +4

    I believe in meritocracy and the inheritance law is totally inconsistent to the meritocratic idea as whole. I would guess it's the biggest single reasons to injustice and inequality of opportunities, more or less, all over the world.

    • @jonkeuviuhc1641
      @jonkeuviuhc1641 Před 5 lety +1

      I totally agree. Though I more radical and I'd say that the instutions of the family is the root cause of inequality and an obstacle to true meritocracy, and we should abolished it.

  • @johntindell9591
    @johntindell9591 Před 5 lety +1

    thank you so much

  • @danielese3600
    @danielese3600 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks!

    • @crashcourse
      @crashcourse  Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you for supporting our channel!

  • @teezb2812
    @teezb2812 Před 5 lety +1

    Great explanation!

  • @sanmm5378
    @sanmm5378 Před 8 měsíci

    Good explaination thanks😊

  • @rockgkid
    @rockgkid Před 5 lety +1

    Very impressive,keep doing your great work.

  • @rachel9721
    @rachel9721 Před 6 lety +1

    Can anyone tell me how should I reference this video for an essay? (APA format)

  • @zelenisok
    @zelenisok Před 7 lety +5

    imagine an extremely wealthy person who worked for what they have? yeah, right after i imagine a rectangular circle x)

    • @jonkeuviuhc1641
      @jonkeuviuhc1641 Před 5 lety +1

      @Kathy Sharp Yes he did work for what he had, but he constantly screwed people over...

    • @xentiment6581
      @xentiment6581 Před 4 lety

      oh yeah? so you believe that somehow money that people who were born rich have just magically appeared in their family? Give me a break.

    • @dudemanbroguy5747
      @dudemanbroguy5747 Před 4 lety

      @@xentiment6581 so are you saying that people born rich don't have an advantage?

    • @xentiment6581
      @xentiment6581 Před 4 lety

      @@dudemanbroguy5747 no, im saying someone had to get the money at some point. some families have been rich for 10 generations, some for 3, but at some point, they werent rich and didnt have advantage but they made it.

    • @dudemanbroguy5747
      @dudemanbroguy5747 Před 4 lety

      @@xentiment6581 ok good point, but the only people who don't deserve wealth is people who had it handed to them, it's like playing a video game and instead of working hard to advance and rank up you started off playing on someone else's completed profile

  • @kent6262
    @kent6262 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey no complaints about the video at all,,, just that its actually spelt kshatriya :)

  • @stinkyboomboom
    @stinkyboomboom Před 7 lety +69

    Gandalf's granddaughter

  • @mariuszj3826
    @mariuszj3826 Před 7 lety

    Interestingly enough, social stratification describes core differences between the European mindset and the United States mindset.
    Europeans, mainly, believe that there are strong outside factors that contribute to a person's status, hence, such vast government social programs are so popular. It is due to a long-standing feudal history that had a very fixed social hierarchy and if you were poor, you were considered the unfortunate one. Furthermore, Europe has a very strong Union tradition that is very much respected in majority of European countries. Also is the place of birth of proto-modern public education and other vast majority of social programs that had/have been in different forms present for centuries in Europe.
    Americans on the other hand have a very distinct John Locke approach to liberalism that came with the Enlightenment. It is also supplemented with the agrarian ideal of self-sufficiency found in Jefferson and distrust of centralized powers found in Thoreau. It's a very strong tradition of abolishing social distinctions but it is very superficial on many levels if someone cares to read Tocqueville and his thoughts on the American experience.
    The core underlining factor of success in life is accumulating wealth and that is the basis for majority of American social hierarchy. Europe has a much more vague distinction of social class that is based on birth, education, occupation, and focuses little on accumulated wealth.

  • @scoopityboop
    @scoopityboop Před 7 lety +13

    what if instead I just took a relative's wealth when they died and used it to manipulate government to inherit even more massively insane amounts of wealth through reduced government spending going towards huge tax breaks for me? Do i deserve that money?

  • @fernandoestrada205
    @fernandoestrada205 Před 5 lety +1

    Kshatriya's is misspelled on the video.

  • @aradhyadeb1656
    @aradhyadeb1656 Před 5 lety +1

    God Bless You😭

  • @R04R
    @R04R Před 7 lety

    nice explanation

  • @yvonnethomas8871
    @yvonnethomas8871 Před rokem

    Both deserved their wealth because maintaining money is work too.

  • @peacewillow
    @peacewillow Před 4 lety +7

    you don't think the homeless are "untouchables"?
    check your privilege.
    and, just so ypu know, "the american dream" is a joke.
    work as hard as you like at a minimum wage job, you still won't be able to buy your own house.

  • @william41017
    @william41017 Před 7 lety +2

    Crash Course,
    Please do ADMINISTRATION (I don't know if that's how you call it in english) or ENTREPRENEURSHIP

  • @jerrymuns
    @jerrymuns Před 4 lety

    I should have learned more about this at an earlier age. I would have shed my ignorance and frustration long ago lol

  • @ok-xo8946
    @ok-xo8946 Před 7 lety

    does the estate system of social stratification in medieval europe promote to productivity in the society?

  • @feiwaan
    @feiwaan Před 6 lety

    Am just here because of a test next week,...not so interested in this aspect of life tbh ..I can't wait to graduate. 😧

  • @blackrainbow1100
    @blackrainbow1100 Před 5 lety

    Very helpful, thanks!

  • @tannersteward1536
    @tannersteward1536 Před 4 lety

    What’s an example of closed system and open system from this video? Please help!

  • @isaakoatiaesolo
    @isaakoatiaesolo Před rokem +1

    0:18 no one deserves wealth

  • @joaogodoy6968
    @joaogodoy6968 Před 7 lety

    I'm curious about what she said about soviet stratification. Can anyone refer me to some sources to better understand it?

  • @neilmukherjee5666
    @neilmukherjee5666 Před 6 lety

    You are great.