Download The Sociological Point of View

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship wikipedia , lookup

Social stratification wikipedia , lookup

Social anthropology wikipedia , lookup

Tribe (Internet) wikipedia , lookup

Traian Herseni wikipedia , lookup

Origins of society wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Chapter One
 To better understand human society, sociologists study
how humans interact with each other.
Describe the clothing and makeup the Huli men
wear.
2. Identify the two possible meanings of the dance
performed during the segment.
3. Explain why the Huli people are happy to welcome
tourists.
4. State how the elder and the young boy who were
interviewed feel about the traditions of their people
and tourists’ role in keeping their traditions alive.
1.
3
Section 1
 The primary interest of sociologists is the combination
of
 The diversity of society/difference in how people view a
certain subject
 example: religion is a personal choice
 The shared characteristics and ideas of society
 example: crime is wrong
 For psychology, we had a math problem:
 PSYCHOLOGY = thoughts + behaviors
 We have one for sociology too:
 SOCIOLOGY = human society + social behavior

Definition: look at social life in a scientific systematic
way, rather than depending on common-sense
explanations
 Purpose of developing
 See a connection between you and society
 Broaden your view of the social world
 Learn there are many views of social reality
 Sociological Imagination: the ability to make a
connection between your personal life and the
larger world

Remember, the Social Sciences include: sociology,
psychology, anthropology, history, economics, and
political science
Section 2

Developed as a separate  The Early Years—
study in the late 1800s
primarily in France,
Germany, and England
 Due to the Industrial
Revolution and the
many social changes
due to urbanization
 Considered the father of sociology; he
coined
the name sociology
 Intrigued by the causes and consequences of the
French Revolution
 Focused on social order and social change
 Said social statics hold society together and social
dynamics were the ways society changed
 Never completed his college education
 Pursued a study of sociology after
inheriting enough money to quit
working
 Social Darwinism—coined the
phrase survival of the fittest to refer
to the similarities between societies
and biological systems
 Could never hold a job for long because
of his revolutionary and radical ideas
 Felt society was influenced by its
economy and two groups—the
proletariat (workers) and the
bourgeoisie (capitalists/owners)
 His views led to the development of
conflict theory
 Developed the first college sociology
course in France
 Focused only on observable phenomena
 Organized the first sociological study—
Suicide, 1897
 Looked at separate groups in
society
 Verstehen: put yourself in
someone else’s shoes
 Employed the concept of ideal
type—the basic components of
features of society
 Firsts
 College Class: University of Kansas, 1889
 College Department: University of Chicago, 1892
 Organization: 1905
 Growth
 115 members in 1906
 Over 14,000 members today
Remember, a perspective is just an idea
 Based on the ideas of Comte, Spencer, and
Durkheim
 View society as a set of interrelated parts that work
together to ensure the social system runs smoothly
 Functions—positive consequences for society
 Manifest Function: the intended consequence
 Latent Function: the unintended consequence
 Focus on the forces in society that promote
competition and change; can be violent or non-violent
 Competition over scarce resources (like money) is at
the basis of social conflict
 Focus is on how individuals interact with one another
in society
 Look at the role of symbols in our daily lives
 Sociologists: study how society works together
 Psychologists: study thoughts and behaviors of the
individual
 Economists: study financial situations
 Anthropologists: study people—what makes them
different from animals
 Historians: study trends from the past