• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Törnberg, Petter - Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences
Törnberg, Petter - Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences

... the real entities of the social world (Byrne, 2002, p.136)? Are higher-level organizations (like firms, tribes, and states) fully explainable in terms of the preferences of their members, or are higher-level organizations also social individuals with their own properties and powers? Can individual a ...
A Sociology of Translation: From Text World to Life World
A Sociology of Translation: From Text World to Life World

... cultural reasons for the discrepancy between the rather marginal status of the translator. The study is characteristic of social constructivism. In the paper “Translation, Irritation and Resonance”, Theo Hermans (2007), drawing upon Luhmann‟s social system theory, viewed translation as a social syst ...
How to Analyze the Chinese Economy with the Help of Max Weber
How to Analyze the Chinese Economy with the Help of Max Weber

... how to act or, more precisely, to a set of meanings that actors feel that they want to follow or have to follow. An order, especially if it is enforced by a staff, comes close to what is meant by an institution today. The purpose of sociology is not to explain single important events (this is the ta ...
The critique of methodological nationalism: Theory and history
The critique of methodological nationalism: Theory and history

... sin, but we all become unintended sinners the very second we try to grasp the nationstate’s fundamental features and the problematic nature of its position in modernity.2 The paradox of the current debate on methodological nationalism is that no one admits being committed to it, and yet its presence ...
Activating, seeking and creating common ground: A socio
Activating, seeking and creating common ground: A socio

Understanding Cultural Omnivores: Social and Political Attitudes∗
Understanding Cultural Omnivores: Social and Political Attitudes∗

Sample
Sample

... of First Nations people. This means that Okim should use ____________________. a. Random sampling b. Oversampling c. Generalization d. Triangulation (answer: b; page 36; application; moderate) 31. The grade point average (GPA) of students participating in an experiment on academic achievement rose o ...
Social Theories of Environmental Reform: Towards a Third Generation
Social Theories of Environmental Reform: Towards a Third Generation

Health-related stigma - Wiley Online Library
Health-related stigma - Wiley Online Library

... property and to prevent their escape and ensure the return of runaways the Greeks ‘tattooed’ them: the sharp pointed instrument used for the purpose made a mark called a ‘stigma’ (the Greek for ‘to prick’ is stig). Today, usage of the word ‘stigma’ connotes a mark of disapproval, as likely to be inv ...
M - Durham e-Theses
M - Durham e-Theses

Social and Cultural Anthropology: The Key Concepts
Social and Cultural Anthropology: The Key Concepts

... The concepts of agent and agency, perhaps related most closely to that of power, are usually deployed in debates over the relationship between individuals and social structure. They also pertain, however, to the nature of individual consciousness, its ability to constitute and reconstitute itself, a ...
Sociology of Racism - Scholars at Harvard
Sociology of Racism - Scholars at Harvard

... There are at least two distinct phases in the sociology of racism, demarcated by the changing nature of race and racism as constructed by social actors and social forces after the Second World War. The first phase—from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century—typically considered racism as ...
Sociology Major Requirements and Advising Worksheet
Sociology Major Requirements and Advising Worksheet

... 4. Students must take courses (electives and methods seminar) from at least THREE substantive areas. 5. Minimum Grade of C-: Students must earn a C- or better in each core course for it to meet the major requirements. 6. Senior Seminar Prerequisites: Students must be eligible for graduation in the s ...
Sociology: Perspective, Theory, and Method
Sociology: Perspective, Theory, and Method

... 1. Which discipline defines itself as “the systematic study of human society”? a. sociology c. economics b. psychology d. history 2. Making use of the sociological perspective encourages: a. challenging commonly held beliefs. c. the belief that society is mysterious. b. accepting conventional ideas. ...
Popular Culture and Narrative—Introduction
Popular Culture and Narrative—Introduction

... interpretive reading of life stories. Yet the methods also indicate the blurred nature of this distinction, in for example Walters’s reliance on an entirely implicit methodology for her cultural analysis, or Smith’s use of the rhetorical structure of drama to understand her interviews with boys. Suc ...
Ethnography
Ethnography

... John Brewer’s book on ethnography exemplifies these features well. It is more than a textbook about ethnography in that it reveals valuable insights into his experiences with this approach in a variety of contexts. Brewer is especially well known for his research into the Royal Ulster Constabulary a ...
Speaking sociologically with big data: symphonic social science and
Speaking sociologically with big data: symphonic social science and

SOCY4400 Contemporary Social Theory
SOCY4400 Contemporary Social Theory

Social Darwinism in Anglophone Academic Journals
Social Darwinism in Anglophone Academic Journals

... Science does not stand separate from society or politics, but it has standards of openness, veracity and rigor. A worry is that the term ‘Social Darwinism’ has been used in the twentieth century to close down much of the discussion in the social sciences concerning the influence of human biology on ...
The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical
The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical

... The Political Economy of a Plural World is a new volume by one of the world’s leading critical thinkers in international political economy. Building on his seminal contributions to the field, Robert W. Cox engages with the major themes that have characterized his work over the past three decades, an ...
McGraw-Hill
McGraw-Hill

... © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
Adorno for Revolutionaries? - The International Marxist
Adorno for Revolutionaries? - The International Marxist

... social phenomena into predetermined categories as ‘consumers’ of ‘styles’. If, in what follows, I digress somewhat with some strictly ‘philosophical’ observations, I do so in order to address one of Watson’s key concerns: how to overcome the narrow individualist subjectivity of bourgeois culture wit ...
European integration is not only useful, it is also meaningful
European integration is not only useful, it is also meaningful

... not limited to ad-hoc explanations of decision-making processes. It does not ask how political authority is applied but how it is constituted. This implies a broad view on political institutions, which are not only analysed as formal legal bodies with a particular mandate but as patterns of social r ...
ivo komšić the social power of mind
ivo komšić the social power of mind

... Croatian National Council (HNV), Friar Luka Markešić, asked me to cite certain passages from my book The Survived Country for the purposes of the HNV, outlining the activities of this non-government organization, and publish it as a separate work. In particular, in the book I published in distant 20 ...
The killing fields of inequality - Análise Social
The killing fields of inequality - Análise Social

... and the political agenda. The United States is the trailblazer, where Southern states (most recently Tennessee) can offer incentives to corporate investment on the condition that no trade union is allowed, and where the Supreme Court majority has just lifted all restrictions on corporate financing o ...
< 1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ... 144 >

Sociology of knowledge



The sociology of knowledge is the study of the relationship between human thought and the social context within which it arises, and of the effects prevailing ideas have on societies. It is not a specialized area of sociology but instead deals with broad fundamental questions about the extent and limits of social influences on individual's lives and the social-cultural basics of our knowledge about the world. Complementary to the sociology of knowledge is the sociology of ignorance, including the study of nescience, ignorance, knowledge gaps, or non-knowledge as inherent features of knowledge making.The sociology of knowledge was pioneered primarily by the sociologists Émile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. Their works deal directly with how conceptual thought, language, and logic could be influenced by the sociological milieu out of which they arise. In Primitive Classification, Durkheim and Mauss take a study of ""primitive"" group mythology to argue that systems of classification are collectively based and that the divisions with these systems are derived from social categories. While neither author specifically coined nor used the term 'sociology of knowledge', their work is an important first contribution to the field.The specific term 'sociology of knowledge' is said to have been in widespread use since the 1920s, when a number of German-speaking sociologists, most notably Max Scheler and Karl Mannheim, wrote extensively on sociological aspects of knowledge. With the dominance of functionalism through the middle years of the 20th century, the sociology of knowledge tended to remain on the periphery of mainstream sociological thought. It was largely reinvented and applied much more closely to everyday life in the 1960s, particularly by Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann in The Social Construction of Reality (1966) and is still central for methods dealing with qualitative understanding of human society (compare socially constructed reality). The 'genealogical' and 'archaeological' studies of Michel Foucault are of considerable contemporary influence.
  • studyres.com © 2026
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report