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Sociology 231 The Sociological Perspective What Is Sociology? It is one of the Social Sciences along with: – Psychology, Anthropology, Criminology, Economics, Political Science, and History The study of social life and the social causes and consequences of human behavior – Sociologists look for the social causes/influences of human behavior – Looks beyond psychology Sociologists rely on “The Sociological Imagination” 3/22 The Sociological Imagination is the Ability to See the Relationship Between Individual Experiences and the Larger Society in Which They Occur. 4/22 Sociologists try not to take anything for granted or accept anything at face value Want to “peel” back the layers of reality Are generally skeptical of explanations about human behavior or situations until proven to be true – Always ask “why?” and “how?” 5/22 Why ???? 6/22 Because not everything is what it seems... 7/22 Also, We Sometimes Rely On Common Sense To Explain Human Behavior And Other Situations 8/22 Examples Those who suffered from child abuse are more likely to abuse their children Those who live together before marriage have a better chance of a successful marriage than those who did not live together Couples with children are happier than those who do not have children The majority of those on welfare are lazy and really don’t want to work 9/22 Why Study Sociology? Helps us determine why people do the things that they do – E.g. Why do some people grow up to be child abusers, alcoholics, poor, etc.? Allows us to make important decisions regarding policies, laws, etc. that effect society – Example: What is the best way to treat poverty 11/22 How And Why Did Sociology Emerge? 19th Century governments began collecting statistics on: Criminal activity Birth and death rates Suicide rates 12/22 The Result: Social scientists discovered patterns that seemed contradictory to common sense Noticed that these patterns remained consistent, again defying common sense 13/22 Suicide As An Example Common sense suggested suicide was an individualistic, random action Yet, if this were true, we would expect to see fluctuations, not stable patterns Yet 3 patterns emerged – Rates were extremely stable from year to year – Rates often varied greatly from one place to another – Suicide rates were rising all over Europe These Patterns and the questions they elicited gave rise to sociology 14/22 Durkheim’s View of Suicide Durkheim challenged purely psychological explanations for suicide – Noticed that suicide was more than just an individual act, social forces played a role He found that two things determine who is at risk for suicide – Social integration (How imbedded in a social network are you?) – Social regulation (How tightly does the society or reference group regulate you?) Found that there were four types of suicide, each of which corresponded to the two variables above 15/22 Integration Regulation High High Low Low Durkheim’s 4 Types of Suicide Altruistic (extreme social integration) – Found that those who were extremely integrated in groups had high suicide rates » E.g. Military personal Egoistic (lack of social integration) – Found that people with few family and friendship ties had higher suicide rates Fatalistic (extreme social regulation) – Found that those whose lives were excessively ordered by agents over whom they have no control had higher suicide rates » E.g. prisoners and mental patients 17/22 Anomic (lack of social regulation) – Found that those whose lives were loosely regulated had higher suicide rates » E.g. Individuals with a lot of power, rock stars (Kurt Cobain) 18/22 Conclusions Psychological explanations cannot fully explain why people commit suicide Social integration and regulation help determine who is more at risk for suicide – In short, social relationships (or lack thereof) shape the decision to commit suicide 19/22