A major challenge confronting contemporary theory is to overcome its
fixation on written narratives and the culture of print. In this
presentation of a general theory of systems, Germany's most prominent
and controversial social thinker sets out a contribution to sociology
that reworks our understanding of meaning and communication.
Luhmann concedes that there is no longer a binding representation of
society within society, but refuses to describe this situation as a loss
of legitimation or a crisis of representation. Instead, he proposes that
we search for new ways of coping with the enforced selectivity that
marks any self-description under the conditions of functionally
differentiated modern society. For Luhmann, the end of metanarratives
does not mean the end of theory, but a challenge to theory, an
invitation to open itself to theoretical developments in a number of
disciplines that, for quite some time, have been successfully working
with cybernetic models that no longer require the fiction of the
external observer.
Social Systems provides the foundation for a theory of modern society
that would be congruent with this new understanding of the world. One of
the most important contributions to social theory of recent decades, it
has implications for many disciplines beyond sociology.