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HSP3M Unit 1 Q. What do social scientist study? Human behaviour Q. Why? To understand why people do what they do – so we can then make society a better place for all What are the Social Sciences? • Anthropology – The scientific study of the human species and of the various cultures that make up humanity • including sub-cultures What are the Social Sciences? • Sociology – the scientific study of the development, structure, and functioning of society What are the Social Sciences? • Psychology – the systematic study of people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviours Quantitative vs. Qualitative • • • • Quantitative Numbers Measurable Uses statistical inference • WHAT, WHERE, WHEN • Qualitative • Relies on reason • Smaller and more focused samples • WHY and HOW The Incident at OC Transpo • Pierre Lebrun/Charles Whitman • Unpopular/Loner • Anger management problems • Low self-esteem • No meaningful relationships with women • Paranoid/delusional • Social outcast Sociology • Subject matter • Not psychology • • • • Human behaviour focus on what goes on between people Not economics interested in tangibles ($) and intangibles (love) Not Anthropology focus on modern industrial societies Micro Sociology – small (life up close) Macro Sociology – large (large scale patterns) School of Sociology - Functionalism • Analyze large-scale patterns of society • Society = human body; every part has a function • parts = institutions; when all parts work smoothly together, individuals are protected • Examines the relationships among parts of society Durkhiems’ Suicide Theory • Egoistic suicide resulted from too little social integration. Those individuals who were not sufficiently bound to social groups were left with little social support or guidance, and therefore more likely to take their own life • Altruistic suicide was the result of too much social integration. Self sacrifice was the defining trait, where individuals were so integrated into social groups that they lost sight of their individuality and became willing to sacrifice themselves to the group's interests. Altruistic or Egoistic? In 1963 Buddhist monk Thich Quang Doc burned himself to death during a protest against South Vietnam President Diem. Altruistic or Egoistic? Heaven's Gate was a religious cult led by Marshall Applewhite who convinced 39 followers to commit suicide so their souls could ride on a spaceship hidden behind a comet. Conflict Theory • Karl Marx • Study the social patterns and structures that develop as classes compete for scarce resources • Competition = conflict = formation of social classes • Conflict theorist examine the social patterns that develop as classes struggle against each other • Neo-Marxist Symbolic Interactionism • Max Weber argued that how we act towards people and things is based on the meaning we assign them. We act differently in different social situations because we have attached different meaning to different situations • Focus on the everyday interactions between individuals • Humans construct society by attaching meaning to actions = symbolism Sociology - Hall of Fame Auguste Comte 1798-1857 • First to study sociology – applied scientific methodology (observation and analysis) to his study of society • Positivism – Comte’s insistence on the rigid application of the scientific method in order to arrive at the truth • Social statics – the study of society’s customs, institutions, laws and their interaction • Social dynamics - the stages through which society must go as they experience change Believed that societies has a natural tendency to reach a state of equilibrium Sociology - Hall of Fame Emile Durkheim (1859-1917) • Founder of modern sociology. Father of functionalism • Also used the scientific method to study change in society • Studied relationship between sociology and the criminal justice system – arguing that reform was better than punishment • Studies on suicide: Altruistic suicide (sacrifice himself to save others), anomic suicide (not able to cope, overwhelmed by sudden change), egoistic suicide (does not share the values or goal of society) Sociology - Hall of Fame Karl Marx (1818-1883) • Asked “Why had a few people become fabulously wealthy while the majority had nothing?” • concluded that uneven distributions of wealth was a normal condition in society – which led to a struggle between rich and poor for wealth and power (class conflict) Conflict theory • Bourgeoisie – wealth factory owners • Proletariat – poor, who survive by selling their labour • Believed that the struggle for wealth and power (class conflict) was the driving force behind society and that Society’s problems could not be solved until the wealth and power were redistributed Sociology - Hall of Fame Max Weber (1864-1920) • Modified Marx’s approach to conflict arguing that it was too simplistic since it did not account for the growing middle class • Argued that religion, education, politics and family structure were equally as important as economics when molding peoples’ values. He believed that wealth alone was not enough to give a person power • Believed that government bureaucracies were created to provide essential social services would improve society, not armed revolution • Popularized the idea that society could be reformed and improved – his studies focused on solutions! Sociology - Hall of Fame George Murdock (1897-1985) • Identified shared characteristics of societies around the world – Universals • Over 100 in total including body adornment, ethics, gestures, superstitions and sexual restrictions • Expanded the study of sociology to include more that forces of division in society Physical Anthropology • Studies human evolution and hominid cultures Methods: • Examine fossil, stone and bone remains • Study living primates • Study and compare human genetic variation (connections to biology and genetics) Cultural Anthropology • Studies similarities and differences of living cultures Methods: • Participant Observation CULTURE Beliefs and Behaviours transmitted from generation to generation. Culture is always changing. 1. Material culture: Physical objects 2. Attitudes: including ethics and values 3. Behaviours Myths - traditional story accepted as truth; serves to explain the world view of a people Kinship – relationships among members of a social group that are based on member’s descent from common ancestors Social Anthropology • studies how contemporary living human beings behave in social groups Methods: • Long-term intensive field studies and observation • Customs, economic and political organizations, law, kinship, gender relations Anthropology Hall of Fame Margaret Mead (1901-1978) • Cultural Anthropologist • Pacific Islands • Adolescent culture / gender roles • “Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies” • Personalities largely shaped by culture • Was criticized for poor methodology (personal stories) Anthropology Hall of Fame Ruth Benedict (1887-1948) • Cultural Anthropologist • Looked at role of religion in shaping personality • Linked personality to culture (shame, guilt cultures) • Studied Japanese culture for American re-development in 1945 (distant anthro…) Anthropology Hall of Fame Bronislaw Malinowski (1884-1942) • Social Anthropologist • Functional Theorist – institutions designed to serve people. Therefore culture functions to meet the needs of individuals rather than society as a whole Methods • Exhaustive observations • record keeping • New Guinea Bronislaw Malinowski continued • Rejected cultural evolutionism on the grounds that it was ethno-centric • Anthropologists job is to observe and explain, not judge Cultural Evolution: built on the work of Charles Darwin (1809-1892) Hypothesized that all societies and cultures develop in a regular series of predictable stages Sophisticated (civilized, modern) Primitive Savage Anthropology Hall of Fame Raymond Dart (18931988) • Physical Anthropologist • Discovered Australopithecus – “Southern Ape” 1924 • Transitional stage Apes →humans 2-3 million Years old Anthropology Hall of Fame The Leakey Family: Louis (1903-1972) Mary (1913-1996), Richard (1944-) (Kenya) Physical Anthropologists • Studied the origin of humans (Asia or Africa?) • Important finds: Australopithecus and Homo habilis • Experimented with stone age tools to learn how our ancestors lived • Primate studies 3 Schools of Psychology • Psychoanalysis • Developed by Freud to probe the unconscious mind and treat patients anxieties and phobias • Studies the inner experiences of the mind through dreams, fantasies, feelings • Used to treat trauma and anxiety 3 Schools of Psychology • Behaviorism • Focuses on studying observable behavior • Law of Effect • The mind is an unknowable black box • Deduces principles for the “prediction and control of behaviour” (Watson 1913) • Principles are consistent across species 3 Schools of Psychology Cognitive Psychology • biology-focussed • Areas of study include: 1. Perception 2. memory and learning 3. language use and acquisition 4. reasoning and decisionmaking • Uses standardized tests • Many applications in schools Introvert • Tend to be quiet • Low-key, deliberate, • Gain energy when performing solitary activities • Enjoy intense one-onone social interactions Extrovert • Tend to be energetic when surrounded by people • Enthusiastic/Talkative/ Assertive • Tom Cruise is a Jackass • “I’m in love!”