Durkheim's and Spencer's theoretical ideas are often considered to be antagonistic, primarily because contemporary sociology accepts Durkheim's portrayal of Spencer. This article argues that, in actual fact, Durkheim's and Spencer's principles on the causes of the division of labor are virtually the same and that their principles on the process of integration in differentiating social systems are complementary. Taken together, Spencer and Durkheim offer sociology some of its basic laws of human social organization.
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