Sociology
- relations with other people create opportunites for us to think and act but also set limits on our thoughts and acton
Ontology vs. Epistemology
Ontology: What is real?
-Objectivist: objects have objective existence independent of herself or any other research
-process of finding things already there
-Constructivist: meanings social actors attach to social phenomena are constructed by actors
-dynamic meaning
Epistemology: How do we know what we know?
-Positivist: he can best know things through experiments + collection + analysis of data
-Interpretive: how ppl make sense of world around them
-understand subjective meaning of social action
Birth of Sociology
Scientific revolution (16th c.): encouraged the use of evidence. Democratic revolution (18th c.): human action can change society. Industrial revolution (19th c.): gave sociologists their subject matter
Sociological Perspectve
Sociological Explanation of Suicide
-Émile Durkheim
-varied as result of differences in degree of social solidarity
-Altruistic: group’s interest
-Egoistic: lack social ties
-Anomic: lack of shared morality/norms
Social Solidarity
- the intensity and frequency of their interaction
Social Structures
Microstructures:
-intimate social relations (friends, family)
Macrostructures:
-outside intimate relations (class relations)
Global Structures
-organizations, economic relations
Sociological Imagination
The Social Effects
- Opinions • Values • Beliefs • Knowledge • Habits • Tastes • Desires • Dreams
Reality
-shaped by society
Origins of Sociology
- scientific method of research + vision of ideal society
Theory
explanation of aspect of social life
Sociological Research
observation of social reality to test theory
-objective:
- Describing
• Understanding
• Influencing or improving the social world
Values
Functionalism
Conflict Theory
Symbolic Interactionism
Feminist Theory
Harriet Martineau - first female sociologist
Attributes vs. Variables
Attributes: characteristics that describe people, cases or things (Man or woman)
Variables: logical groupings of attributes (Gender)
data and theory
Data: are empirical facts, meaningful when they are considered in relation to a theory
Theory: a tentative explanation of some observed regularity
Social Constructionism