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Sociology Is sociology a science?.

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Presentation on theme: "Sociology Is sociology a science?."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sociology Is sociology a science?

2 Group Work List 5 things about yourself.
My name is I love I hate My favorite place is I wish 2. Go around the room and get this information from 4 other people.

3 What is Sociology? Sociology: systematic study of social behavior in human groups Study influence of social relationships Determine how those relationships influence behavior Understand how societies develop and change

4 The Sociological Imagination
Sociological imagination: awareness of relationship between an individual and the wider society, today and in the past Ability to view one’s society as an outsider, rather than from perspective of one’s limited experiences and cultural biases Goes beyond personal experiences and observations

5 Sociology and the Social Sciences
Science: body of knowledge obtained by methods that are based on systematic observation Natural Science: study of physical features of nature and ways they interact and change Social Science: study of social features of humans and ways they interact and change Sociologists study influence society has on people's attitudes and behavior and ways people interact and shape society Investigate vast range of relationships Aging Family Human ecology Religion Sociologists test and analyze information they use and rely on scientific studies to describe and understand a social environment

6 What Is Sociological Theory?
Theory: set of statements that seeks to explain problems, actions, or behavior Effective theories have explanatory and predictive power Theories are never a final statement about human behavior

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8 Historical Walk With a partner, pick a current event
What event did you pick? What are the different groups involve? How is the perspective different for each group?

9 Stereotypes Likes Rap & Hip-Hop Favorite book " The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness” Favorite movie “The Purge” This person is? Gender Ethnicity Sexual orientation

10 Stereotypes Likes Classical music (mostly large orchestral works) Favorite book “Great Expectations by Charles Dickens" Favorite movie "Casablanca" This person is? Gender Ethnicity Sexual orientation

11 Stereotypes Likes Latin and Middle Eastern music Favorite book "The Quran" Favorite movie ”Straight Outta Compton" This person is? Gender Ethnicity Sexual orientation

12 Stereotypes Likes Jazz and folk music Favorite book “Freakonomics" Favorite movie ”Moonlight" This person is? Gender Ethnicity Sexual orientation

13 Auguste Comte ( ) Comte is credited with being the founder of sociology First to apply the scientific method to the social world, known as positivism. Comte was interested in the two interrelated issues: social order and social change. What holds the society together (Why is there a social order)? And once the society is set then what causes it to change? Why its directions change? Believed there must be laws that underlie the society. Therefore we should discover these principles by applying scientific method to social world. Once these principles discovered then we could apply these for social reform. He advocated for building new societies on twin foundations of science and industry rather than on religion and landowner-serf relationship.   This new science was named Sociology (1838) – the study of society.

14 Herbert Spencer ( ) He was an Englishman and is sometimes called second founder of sociology. He too believed that society  operates under some fixed laws. Social Darwinist - Social Darwinism grew out of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. When the favorable traits of the species are passed on to an individual in the next generation, then that individual thrives. He called the “natural selection” because only the best suited individuals survived. In the late 1800s, this theory was applied to human society to explain why some people became millionaires and other did not. Those who were poor were lazy. By following the basic principle of Social Darwinism Spenser advocated that ‘let the fittest survive’. There should be no reform because it will help in the survival of lower order individuals. (Charity and helping the poor were considered to be wrong).

15 Karl Marx ( ) Karl Heinrich Marx was born into a comfortable middle-class home in Germany on May 5, 1818. Founder of Marxism  Marxism is the political and economic philosophy in which the concept of class struggle plays a central role in understanding society's allegedly inevitable development from bourgeois (property owning class) oppression under capitalism to ultimately classless society. Marx argues that in capitalist society, an economic minority (the bourgeoisie) dominate and exploit an economic majority (the proletariat). Marx argues that capitalism is exploitative.

16 Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) He was French.
His primary goal was of getting sociology recognized as a separate academic discipline. His systematic study comparing suicide rates among several countries revealed an underlying social factor: People were more likely to commit suicide if their ties to others in their communities were weak.

17 Max Weber ( ) Used cross-cultural and historical materials in order to determine how extensively social groups affect people’s orientations to life (how your background influences your choices)

18 Stanford Prison Experiment
The Stanford prison experiment was a study of the psychological effects of becoming a prisoner and prison guard. Conducted at Stanford University August 14 – Funded by US Office of Naval Research to understand conflict between military guards and prisoners Twenty-four male students out of 75 were selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock.

19 Your Experiment Come up with a topic you want to study, a question you want answered and an experiment to conduct Be prepared to answer the following questions: What did you decide? Why did you pick that? What supplies will you need? What would you expect to see during the experiment? Could it be consider unethical?

20 Essay #1 Discuss the ethical considerations governing experimentation.
Use specific examples and point out ethical problems faced by researchers. Evaluate if science should be constricted by ethics.


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