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SOCIOLOGY – The scientific study of human society and social
interactions.
SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION (C. Wright Mills) –
Looking at all types of individual human behavior and
searching for the common patterns.
ORIGINS OF SOCIOLOGY - COMTE

• August Comte was a philosopher .
• He coined the term sociology to refer to the science of man.
• He wanted to use the scientific methods of the natural
  sciences to reveal the principles of society using empirical
  means
• Comte suggested two areas of study:
• 1. Social Statics – The study of social structures and
  interrelated parts
• 2. Social Dynamics – The study of social change and progress
  in society
DEFINITIONS
• Def - Scientific Method: Process by which
  knowledge is built through observation
  experimentation, generalization and verification
• Def – Empiricism: Generalizations (findings) are
  only valid if the are based on evidence that can
  be observed directly, or verified through the
  senses
• Def - Paradigm: A model or framework that
  guides research
MARTINEAU

• Martineau was a social observer. Her choice of this endeavor
  and her competence were in part due to her social isolation
  caused by her handicaps.
• She was able to view society around her as an “OUTSIDER”

• She was an early proponent of using research findings to
  improve society.
ORIGINS - HERBERT SPENCER

• Spencer was a philosopher. He created the term social
  darwinism, to apply Darwin’s idea of “the survival of the
  fittest” to society. He did this at two levels:
• 1. He applied it to individuals, and their standing within
  society. Largely discredited, this view blamed the individual
  for being poor, uneducated, or otherwise unsuccessful.
• 2. More importantly for future sociology he also applied the
  idea to society in general. He saw society as made up of
  interdependent parts that have to function well
  together, while each meeting a specific need of society.
•    - Early structural functionalist view
KARL MARX

• Marx was a historian and political economist. His predictions
  of the rise of communism and his work toward that goal are
  not important for sociology.
• However, his social criticism is important.
• CLASS CONFLICT - According to Marx:
• 1. All societies exhibit a struggle over scarce resources and
  have inequality. (Feudalism, Capitalism)
• 2. In capitalism there are two main groups, owners and
  workers. This division determines an individuals class.
• 3. Whoever controls the means of production, also controls
  all other institutions in society (politics, education, religion)
MARX - continued

•  4. By means of this influence the owners control
  norms, values, laws and beliefs of a society to keep control.
•  5. The focus on conflict between groups in society (for Marx this
  was economic conflict) and the desire to fix the problem (of
  oppressed workers for Marx) are his imprints on Sociology.



• Def - Conflict Theory – Each individual or group struggles to attain
  the maximum benefit and society changes as groups vie with each
  other. Created an explanation for change. Structural/functional
  theories have trouble explaining change in a balanced society
•
KARL MARX

• Def - Evaluative Paradigm – Starts with a opinion about a
  social fact, usually a critique/criticism.
• Then studies the problem, in part, to find ways to ameliorate
  or fix it.
• Def - – to make or become better, more bearable or more
  satisfactory.
• Modern Day extensions from economic criticism
•   - feminism
•   - race theory
•   - gay rights
EMILE DURKHEIM
• Durkheim was a French sociologist. He held a structural
  functionalist paradigm toward society.
•   - This meant that he viewed society as an organism that is
  necessary in its current form for individuals to co-exist in
  society and to have social cohesion
• 2 types of social cohesion for Durkheim
•   - Mechanical (old) – People are of the same mind because
  they have the same experiences, status and background:
•       - as in farming villages
•   - Organic (new) Based on contract law that creates the
  “rules” for interaction. Industrialization, Division of
  Labor, specialization are components of organic society
DURKHEIM - SUICIDE

• Famous for his study of suicide which was one of the earliest
  studies to apply the scientific method to a social problem.
•     - Propose a theory - Suicide is a social fact based on levels
  of social regulation and social integration.
•     - Collect data – Used suicide rates collected by
  governments (second hand data as opposed to primary)
•     - Test the theory - Compare suicide rates between
  groups with different levels of regulation and/or integration
•     - Review the results to see if they confirm the theory and
  create new theories based on results
DURKHEIM - SUICIDE
REGULATION – The amount of social    INTEGRATION – The amount of
control exerted by all social        cohesion the individual feels toward
institutions                         the group/society
• TOO MUCH REGULATION:               • TOO MUCH INTEGRATION:
  FATALISTIC SUICIDE – The           • ALTRUISTIC SUICIDE – The
  individual feels they cannot         individual identifies too strongly
  influence the outcome;               with the group and will sacrifice
                                       their life for them.
• TOO LITTLE REGULATION:
• ANOMIC SUICIDE – Collapse of       • TOO LITTLE INTEGRATION:
  regulatory                         • EGOISTIC SUICIDE - Low feelings
  mechanisms, instability leads to     of involvement or responsibility
  confusion about goals and means      to others. Excessive individualism
  to achieve them.                     can favor suicide.
MAX WEBER
interactionist                     functionalist
• Verstehen – German word         • However, Weber still felt
  loosely translated as             that the science needed to
  empathetic understanding          be scientific and rigorous.
• Sociology then is a science     • He settled on using rational
  concerned with the                (logical) understanding of
  interpretive understanding        events
  of social action                • Ideal Types – Isolate key
• For Weber action is social if     features of a phenomena
  its subjective meaning takes      (limited list). Then view and
  into account the behavior of      measure these to extract
  others.                           scientific explanations.
WEBER
• Weber used ideal types to study many facets of
  social life. He used historical and literature reviews
  rather than statistical studies.
• Bureaucracy – Weber, as opposed to Marx, felt
  bureaucratic management would control both
  capitalist and socialist societies and the individuals
  within them.
•   - He saw it as the ultimate result of the rise of
  rationality in modern society.
• IDEAL ELEMENTS OF BUREAUCRACY. - He identified
  Officeholders, an hierarchy, written records, strict
  rules to follow, and specialization.
WEBER
• Rise of Capitalism – Weber differed from Marx
  about the explanation for the rise of
  Capitalism. He started with the question of
  why Protestants were more successful as
  capitalists than Catholics
• Weber felt that the Protestant Ethic of hard
  work and thrift, contributed to the capitalist
  explosion in England and the United States.
• - Like Marx he looked to historical changes
  to explain the rise of capitalism, but differed in
  the answer.
WEBER
• Weber also disagreed with Marx’s view that the
  economic order determined all influence and control
• He argued that there were three sources of influence
  within society
• 1. Class – this was equivalent to Marx’s economic
  position
• 2. Status – This is equivalent to prestige. EX: Type
  of job (doctor) , elder in society, church official.
• 3. Political Party – This is equivalent with
  power, the ability to determine law and
  enforcement.
• For Weber a class was a group that was similar across
  all three variables.
weber

• Weber did not explore the interpretive
  understanding side of the discipline even
  though he acknowledged its importance.
• This was left to the interactionists
GEORGE HERBERT MEAD
• Mead was a philosopher at the University of
  Chicago who was a pragmatist
• Def – Pragmatism- Test the truth of a belief by
  its actual consequences. Tries to capture the
  created, socially constructed reality
• Def – Phenomenology – Things do not have
  meaning in and of themselves, their meaning
  is created by like minded groups defining
  them.
MEAD
• Symbolic Interactionism (SI) a term coined by
  Sociologist Herbert Blumer followed Mead’s
  philosophy:
• Def: SI - It is concerned with the meanings that
  people place on their own and other’s behavior.
•     They oppose Behaviorists who believe that
  humans, like other animals simply respond to stimuli.
  S - R.
•     Mead added the Organism to the middle of this
  equation S - O - R. The organism interprets the
  meaning of the stimulus before reacting.
MEAD
• Herbert Blumer, Harold Garfinkel and Erving Goffman
  all used the SI approach in sociology.
• This built upon, or expanded, Weber’s concept of
  Verstehen.
• They view action as built up by the interaction of
  people in social situations as they take into account
  and interpret the actions of others.
• This work is now broadly called the
  interactionist perspective, the third major
  paradigm in sociology today.
W. E. B. DUBOIS
• First African American to earn a PHD from Harvard
• Established and chaired the Sociology program at
  Atlanta University
• His early work followed a very empirical, scientific
  method. He conducted a large scale survey of blacks
  in Philadelphia with minimal assistance
•    - Door to door survey of 4500 individuals
• First person to use a conflict theory approach to
  discuss race relations instead of economic issues.
• Decried the position society had placed blacks in and
  worked to improve their social and educational
  position.
DUBOIS
• He extended the consideration of conflict within society
  that sociologists study today to consider ethnicity.
  (conflict theory)
• He followed in the footsteps of Martineau in that he did
  not just identify the problems in society but felt it was
  important that people work to fix them. (evaluative
  paradigm)

• His work was not widely cited or accepted during his
  early life due to both his subject and his status as an
  outsider in a white, male academic world.
• This, and other factors, led him away from academics and
  more into political action. He was a co-founder of the
  NAACP.
3 perspectives - Functionalism
• Structural/Functionalist: Studies mostly social structures.
• Def: Functionalism - Sees society as a system of
  interrelated parts that function together well to enable
  human coexistence. See society as stable and self-
  regulating.
• Sociological Method: Analyze society by looking at the
  parts and what purpose they serve and what positive
  contribution they make.
• Primarily utilize the scientific method to create, test and
  verify theories of social institutions.
• Durkheim and Weber both fit this schema. Although
  Weber also recognized a role for considering individual
  perspective.
3 perspectives – Conflict theory
• Def: Conflict Theory – Proposes that each
  individual, or group, struggles to maximize their
  position an maintain it. This struggle leads to
  changes in society, inequality, and conflict.
• See society in constant flux and change. Those with
  power try to maintain it while others seek change.
• Sociological Method: Analyze society by looking at
  the parts and what purpose they serve, but focus on
  competition as opposed to smooth functioning.
• Primarily utilize the scientific method to create, test
  and verify theories of social institutions
• Marx (economic) and DuBois (race relations) fit this
  schema
3 perspectives – Interactionist
• Def: Interactionist Perspective – Focuses on how people
  interpret the social world in which they participate.
• Sees society as made up of meanings created by like minded
  groups who interact with each other.
• Scientific Method: Analyze society by finding out how
  understandings are built up and used to allow individuals to
  function together.
• Use participant observation and other methods to study sub-
  cultures much as anthropologists do with tribal cultures. Do
  not usually generalize or verify(part of scientific method). Do
  not create “grand” theories.
• Blumer, Garfinkel, Goffman used this methodology

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Chap 1 PPT

  • 1. SOCIOLOGY – The scientific study of human society and social interactions.
  • 2. SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION (C. Wright Mills) – Looking at all types of individual human behavior and searching for the common patterns.
  • 3. ORIGINS OF SOCIOLOGY - COMTE • August Comte was a philosopher . • He coined the term sociology to refer to the science of man. • He wanted to use the scientific methods of the natural sciences to reveal the principles of society using empirical means • Comte suggested two areas of study: • 1. Social Statics – The study of social structures and interrelated parts • 2. Social Dynamics – The study of social change and progress in society
  • 4. DEFINITIONS • Def - Scientific Method: Process by which knowledge is built through observation experimentation, generalization and verification • Def – Empiricism: Generalizations (findings) are only valid if the are based on evidence that can be observed directly, or verified through the senses • Def - Paradigm: A model or framework that guides research
  • 5. MARTINEAU • Martineau was a social observer. Her choice of this endeavor and her competence were in part due to her social isolation caused by her handicaps. • She was able to view society around her as an “OUTSIDER” • She was an early proponent of using research findings to improve society.
  • 6. ORIGINS - HERBERT SPENCER • Spencer was a philosopher. He created the term social darwinism, to apply Darwin’s idea of “the survival of the fittest” to society. He did this at two levels: • 1. He applied it to individuals, and their standing within society. Largely discredited, this view blamed the individual for being poor, uneducated, or otherwise unsuccessful. • 2. More importantly for future sociology he also applied the idea to society in general. He saw society as made up of interdependent parts that have to function well together, while each meeting a specific need of society. • - Early structural functionalist view
  • 7. KARL MARX • Marx was a historian and political economist. His predictions of the rise of communism and his work toward that goal are not important for sociology. • However, his social criticism is important. • CLASS CONFLICT - According to Marx: • 1. All societies exhibit a struggle over scarce resources and have inequality. (Feudalism, Capitalism) • 2. In capitalism there are two main groups, owners and workers. This division determines an individuals class. • 3. Whoever controls the means of production, also controls all other institutions in society (politics, education, religion)
  • 8. MARX - continued • 4. By means of this influence the owners control norms, values, laws and beliefs of a society to keep control. • 5. The focus on conflict between groups in society (for Marx this was economic conflict) and the desire to fix the problem (of oppressed workers for Marx) are his imprints on Sociology. • Def - Conflict Theory – Each individual or group struggles to attain the maximum benefit and society changes as groups vie with each other. Created an explanation for change. Structural/functional theories have trouble explaining change in a balanced society •
  • 9. KARL MARX • Def - Evaluative Paradigm – Starts with a opinion about a social fact, usually a critique/criticism. • Then studies the problem, in part, to find ways to ameliorate or fix it. • Def - – to make or become better, more bearable or more satisfactory. • Modern Day extensions from economic criticism • - feminism • - race theory • - gay rights
  • 10. EMILE DURKHEIM • Durkheim was a French sociologist. He held a structural functionalist paradigm toward society. • - This meant that he viewed society as an organism that is necessary in its current form for individuals to co-exist in society and to have social cohesion • 2 types of social cohesion for Durkheim • - Mechanical (old) – People are of the same mind because they have the same experiences, status and background: • - as in farming villages • - Organic (new) Based on contract law that creates the “rules” for interaction. Industrialization, Division of Labor, specialization are components of organic society
  • 11. DURKHEIM - SUICIDE • Famous for his study of suicide which was one of the earliest studies to apply the scientific method to a social problem. • - Propose a theory - Suicide is a social fact based on levels of social regulation and social integration. • - Collect data – Used suicide rates collected by governments (second hand data as opposed to primary) • - Test the theory - Compare suicide rates between groups with different levels of regulation and/or integration • - Review the results to see if they confirm the theory and create new theories based on results
  • 12. DURKHEIM - SUICIDE REGULATION – The amount of social INTEGRATION – The amount of control exerted by all social cohesion the individual feels toward institutions the group/society • TOO MUCH REGULATION: • TOO MUCH INTEGRATION: FATALISTIC SUICIDE – The • ALTRUISTIC SUICIDE – The individual feels they cannot individual identifies too strongly influence the outcome; with the group and will sacrifice their life for them. • TOO LITTLE REGULATION: • ANOMIC SUICIDE – Collapse of • TOO LITTLE INTEGRATION: regulatory • EGOISTIC SUICIDE - Low feelings mechanisms, instability leads to of involvement or responsibility confusion about goals and means to others. Excessive individualism to achieve them. can favor suicide.
  • 13. MAX WEBER interactionist functionalist • Verstehen – German word • However, Weber still felt loosely translated as that the science needed to empathetic understanding be scientific and rigorous. • Sociology then is a science • He settled on using rational concerned with the (logical) understanding of interpretive understanding events of social action • Ideal Types – Isolate key • For Weber action is social if features of a phenomena its subjective meaning takes (limited list). Then view and into account the behavior of measure these to extract others. scientific explanations.
  • 14. WEBER • Weber used ideal types to study many facets of social life. He used historical and literature reviews rather than statistical studies. • Bureaucracy – Weber, as opposed to Marx, felt bureaucratic management would control both capitalist and socialist societies and the individuals within them. • - He saw it as the ultimate result of the rise of rationality in modern society. • IDEAL ELEMENTS OF BUREAUCRACY. - He identified Officeholders, an hierarchy, written records, strict rules to follow, and specialization.
  • 15. WEBER • Rise of Capitalism – Weber differed from Marx about the explanation for the rise of Capitalism. He started with the question of why Protestants were more successful as capitalists than Catholics • Weber felt that the Protestant Ethic of hard work and thrift, contributed to the capitalist explosion in England and the United States. • - Like Marx he looked to historical changes to explain the rise of capitalism, but differed in the answer.
  • 16. WEBER • Weber also disagreed with Marx’s view that the economic order determined all influence and control • He argued that there were three sources of influence within society • 1. Class – this was equivalent to Marx’s economic position • 2. Status – This is equivalent to prestige. EX: Type of job (doctor) , elder in society, church official. • 3. Political Party – This is equivalent with power, the ability to determine law and enforcement. • For Weber a class was a group that was similar across all three variables.
  • 17. weber • Weber did not explore the interpretive understanding side of the discipline even though he acknowledged its importance. • This was left to the interactionists
  • 18. GEORGE HERBERT MEAD • Mead was a philosopher at the University of Chicago who was a pragmatist • Def – Pragmatism- Test the truth of a belief by its actual consequences. Tries to capture the created, socially constructed reality • Def – Phenomenology – Things do not have meaning in and of themselves, their meaning is created by like minded groups defining them.
  • 19. MEAD • Symbolic Interactionism (SI) a term coined by Sociologist Herbert Blumer followed Mead’s philosophy: • Def: SI - It is concerned with the meanings that people place on their own and other’s behavior. • They oppose Behaviorists who believe that humans, like other animals simply respond to stimuli. S - R. • Mead added the Organism to the middle of this equation S - O - R. The organism interprets the meaning of the stimulus before reacting.
  • 20. MEAD • Herbert Blumer, Harold Garfinkel and Erving Goffman all used the SI approach in sociology. • This built upon, or expanded, Weber’s concept of Verstehen. • They view action as built up by the interaction of people in social situations as they take into account and interpret the actions of others. • This work is now broadly called the interactionist perspective, the third major paradigm in sociology today.
  • 21. W. E. B. DUBOIS • First African American to earn a PHD from Harvard • Established and chaired the Sociology program at Atlanta University • His early work followed a very empirical, scientific method. He conducted a large scale survey of blacks in Philadelphia with minimal assistance • - Door to door survey of 4500 individuals • First person to use a conflict theory approach to discuss race relations instead of economic issues. • Decried the position society had placed blacks in and worked to improve their social and educational position.
  • 22. DUBOIS • He extended the consideration of conflict within society that sociologists study today to consider ethnicity. (conflict theory) • He followed in the footsteps of Martineau in that he did not just identify the problems in society but felt it was important that people work to fix them. (evaluative paradigm) • His work was not widely cited or accepted during his early life due to both his subject and his status as an outsider in a white, male academic world. • This, and other factors, led him away from academics and more into political action. He was a co-founder of the NAACP.
  • 23. 3 perspectives - Functionalism • Structural/Functionalist: Studies mostly social structures. • Def: Functionalism - Sees society as a system of interrelated parts that function together well to enable human coexistence. See society as stable and self- regulating. • Sociological Method: Analyze society by looking at the parts and what purpose they serve and what positive contribution they make. • Primarily utilize the scientific method to create, test and verify theories of social institutions. • Durkheim and Weber both fit this schema. Although Weber also recognized a role for considering individual perspective.
  • 24. 3 perspectives – Conflict theory • Def: Conflict Theory – Proposes that each individual, or group, struggles to maximize their position an maintain it. This struggle leads to changes in society, inequality, and conflict. • See society in constant flux and change. Those with power try to maintain it while others seek change. • Sociological Method: Analyze society by looking at the parts and what purpose they serve, but focus on competition as opposed to smooth functioning. • Primarily utilize the scientific method to create, test and verify theories of social institutions • Marx (economic) and DuBois (race relations) fit this schema
  • 25. 3 perspectives – Interactionist • Def: Interactionist Perspective – Focuses on how people interpret the social world in which they participate. • Sees society as made up of meanings created by like minded groups who interact with each other. • Scientific Method: Analyze society by finding out how understandings are built up and used to allow individuals to function together. • Use participant observation and other methods to study sub- cultures much as anthropologists do with tribal cultures. Do not usually generalize or verify(part of scientific method). Do not create “grand” theories. • Blumer, Garfinkel, Goffman used this methodology

Editor's Notes

  • #8: Discuss social relations under fuedalismlords/owners tenants/workers
  • #13: EXAMPLES: FATALISTIC – Vendor who set themselves on fire in Tunisia ALTRUISITIC - Suicide bombers – Japanese and Mideast ANOMIC - Suicide after stock market collapse EGOISTIC - Suicide by someone without friends or family, who feels they have nothing to live for. Notice the concept of balance, which exists in most functionalists world view.
  • #14: Empathy – Walk a mile in another’s shoes, understand their viewpoint
  • #15: German sociologistHeirarchy – People hold positions where there are levels of authority
  • #16: Luther - Religious idea of a calling to do good works here on earchCalvin - Predestinaton, seeking signs of being of the elect, success was seen as thisBaxter - A duty of a calling and self control, placed emphasis on wealth. Earning and saving was good.\\This made the accumulation of capital a positive thing, where many religions of the time did not see this as a positive.
  • #19: Example Native Alaskan language has numerous words for various types of snow. In most cultures these different types are not acknowledged, not a part of the “reality” of the culture.
  • #21: SI MORE DETAIL IN CHAPTER 5 SOCIAL INTERACTION
  • #26: Grand Theory – A theory that can explain all of the interrelations and actions in society. Parsons.