The article focuses on developing and clarifying the main concepts that would form the basis of an integral model of social development. Previous models (Bell, Toffler) were developed in the second half of the last century and now have lost the ability to correctly describe and explain modern social trends and tendencies. This fact, as well as the growing criticism of the idea of social development in post-industrial societies, sets the task for sociologists to develop a relevant theoretical and methodological foundation for studying modern society. The purpose of this work is to develop a conceptual scheme that would be adequate to current ideas about the social structure and forms of social interaction, and which would also form the basis of an integral model of social development. The analysis of previous models illustrated their integrative potential, which, nevertheless, should be clarified. An emergent level of analysis, coupled with the principles of integralism, made it possible to develop a theoretic