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Niklas Luhmann (1927 – 1998) was a German sociologist, philosopher of social science, and a prominent thinker in systems theory, who is considered one of the most important social theorists of the 20th century. During a sabbatical in 1961, he went to Harvard, where he met and studied under Talcott Parsons, then the world's most influential social systems theorist. Niklas Luhmann dismissed Parsons' theory later on, developing a rival approach of his own. In 1968/1969, he briefly served as a lecturer at Theodor Adorno's former chair at the University of Frankfurt and then was appointed full professor of sociology at the newly founded University of Bielefeld, Germany. Niklas Luhmann's magnum opus, Die Gesellschaft der Gesellschaft ("The Society of Society") was published in 1997, and translated subsequently in English, under the title "Theory of Society." This work described segmented societies where territory is a dividing line.
Niklas Luhmann wrote more than 70 books and nearly 400
scholarly articles published on a variety of subjects, including law, economy,
politics, art, religion, ecology, mass media, and love. While his theories have
yet to make a major mark in American sociology, his theory is currently well
known and popular in German sociology, and has also been rather intensively
received in Japan and Eastern Europe, including Russia. Niklas Luhmann's low
profile elsewhere is partly due to the fact that translating his work is a
difficult task, since his writing presents a challenge even to readers of
German, including many sociologists. (Social Systems 1995). Niklas Luhmann's
work directly deals with the operations of the legal system and his autopoietic
theory of law is regarded as one of the more influential contributions to the
sociology of law and socio-legal studies.
Niklas Luhmann is best known to
North Americans for his debate with the critical theorist
Jürgen Habermas over
the potential of social systems theory. Like his erstwhile mentor Talcott
Parsons, Luhmann is an advocate of Grand Theory, although neither in the sense
of philosophical foundationalism nor in the sense of "meta-narrative" as often
invoked in the critical works of post-modernist writers. Luhmann's work tracks
closer to complexity theory broadly speaking, in that it aims to address any
aspect of social life within a universal theoretical framework — as the
diversity of subjects he wrote on indicates. Luhmann's theory is sometimes
dismissed as highly abstract and complex, particularly within the Anglophone
world, whereas his work has had a more lasting influence on scholars from
German-speaking countries, Scandinavia and Italy.
Luhmann himself
described his theory as "labyrinthine" or "non-linear" and claimed he was
deliberately keeping his prose enigmatic to prevent it from being understood
"too quickly", which would only produce simplistic misunderstandings. Luhmann's
systems theory focuses on three topics, which are interconnected in his entire
work. Systems theory as societal theory, Communication theory, and Evolution
theory. Social systems are systems of communication, and society is the most
encompassing social system.