From Social Mood to Collective Events: Measuring the Path by Sociometers

Original article

John L. Casti,                            

PhD, Professor, Director, X-Center, Santa Fe, NM, United States of America

Address: 2834 Don Quixote, Santa Fe, NM  87505, United States of America

E-mail: castiwien@cs.com

Article ID: 020110153

Published online: 7 October 2021

HANDLE: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12656/thebeacon.4.020110153

DOI: https://doi.org/10.55269/thebeacon.4.020110153

 

Quoting (Chicago style): Casti, John L. 2021. “From Social Mood to Collective Events: Measuring the Path by Sociometers.” Beacon J Stud Ideol Ment Dimens 4, 020110153. https://doi.org/10.55269/thebeacon.4.020110153

Language: Russian



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Abstract

How a population/group feels about its future, its so-called “social mood”, and how that mood biases collective events of all types is the focus of this article. Through a variety of “sociometers” running from fashion styles to financial markets behaviour, the paper argues that the social mood dramatically influences the types of events we can expect to see on all time scales. The financial market price movement serve as possibly the best sociometer for measuring the social mood on all time scales. Additionally, I present arguments showing that there is virtually no feedback from events to mood; that is, the social mood is endogeneous to the population and is not determined by any sort of “outside forces”. I hypothesize that it may be mainly determined by “internal ideology” of a group that may be unobvious to its members. Finally, the paper concludes with a research program for turning the hypotheses advanced here into a full-fledged scientific theory of collective human behaviour.

Key words: social mood; social behaviour; sociometer; internal ideology; turning points of global trends; S&P 500; DJIA index; Bovespa index; XU30 index; Israeli General index; collective event; stock market index

Extended summary in English

 

In the paper, I introduce the concept of social mood. It may be defined as the collective feeling/belief a social group or population has about its future on different time scales. On a given time scale, say, a year, the social mood is positive if the population feels that things will be “better” one year from now than they are today; if they believe that things will be worse, then the social mood is negative on that time scale. The social mood is  an example of “internal ideology” of a social group that transforms beliefs and expectations of a set of individuals into different beliefs and expectations that cannot be deduced from individual feelings.

 

Within the socionomics paradigm, there is a logical dependence: herd instinct → social mood (beliefs/feelings) → social behaviour and collective events. This flow is the central hypothesis of socionomics. Considering various examples of social moods and events (e.g., collapse of Enron Corporation in 2001; history of US presidential elections from the foundation of USA up to the present, building the world’s tallest skyscrapers; Middle East military conflicts in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries; terrorist attacks and state leader’s assassination), I demonstrate the central hypothesis in action.

 

In the paper, I suggest using the national stock market indexes as the sociometer. To be more specific, stock market index behaviour does not follow positive or negative social events; it often anticipates them. Moreover, I show that the stock market index is an almost universal indicator of the social mood of population. It works not only for the American realities but everywhere in the world. I describe examples of Brazil, BRICS countries and Turkey to underlie this assumption. These examples provide ample evidence to support the notion that the mood of a population, i.e. its social mood biases the types of social events and behaviours that we can expect to see on all time scales.

 

I argue that the social mood may beget a specific social behaviour and a set of social events, but not vice versa. Moods may lead or not lead to definite events, while there is no direct feedback from social events to social moods. However, it is important to remember that the implication social mood → social events has a stochastic character. Therefore, the behaviour of sociometers that measure social moods cannot predict social events with certainty; it merely describes the probabilities of different possible events.

 

The time scale of social mood is very important. The collective events have a natural unfolding time characteristic for the nature of the event. For example, an event involving some aspect of popular culture such as the type of fashions that are in vogue or the sort of books that are popular are short timescale phenomena, generally unfolding over a period of a few months to a year or so. On the other hand, a collective event like the shift in a dominant political ideology has a much longer unfolding time, normally several years to a decade or more. Finally, very slowly-unfolding events like the decline of a global power may take a century or more.

 

Finally, I propose a draft of research programme for future investigations of social moods. Such a programme must deal with four basic components: 1) data and computation (tool development); 2) social mood analysis; 3) social action analysis; and 4) modelling and exposition.

© 2021 John Casti.
Licensee The Beacon: Journal for Studying Ideologies and Mental Dimensions.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) that permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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