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According to the American Sociological Association, sociology is: “the study of society; a social science involving the study of the social lives of people, groups, and societies; the study of our behavior as social beings, covering everything from the analysis of short contacts between anonymous individuals on the street to the study of global social processes; the scientific study of social aggregations, the entities through which human move throughout their lives; [and] an overarching unification of all studies of humankind, including history psychology, and economic.” What this broad definition makes clear is that while sociology is a relatively new academic discipline, it can trace its roots to many other ways of studying, describing, and controlling human behavior including: philosophy, history, psychology, economics, culture, and religion. In fact, the modern study of sociology continues to interact with other fields to such a high degree that many people confuse it with similar studies of human behavior. However, it is important to keep in mind that sociology focuses on group behavior, rather than individual behavior.

The term “sociology” was coined by Auguste Comte, who is known as the “Father of Sociology.” Comte believed that science could be used to describe the social world and introduced the concept of positivism to sociology. Positivism is regarded by some as a philosophical approach, but actually signaled a significant break from philosophy. Rather than dealing with the esoteric, Comte believed that facts about human social groups could be described using logic and mathematics. This reliance on facts means that understanding of statistics and the scientific method is critical for sociology students. Must-know components of the scientific method include: the hypothesis; independent and dependent variables; and operational definitions. Sociology students must also understand: univariate and multivariate research designs; data analysis; and qualitative and quantitative designs. In fact, while sociology depends, in large part, on quantifiable data, qualitative studies are equally important because of the impossibility of designing adequate quantitative research studies for certain sociological constructs.

Furthermore, like many modern sociologists, Comte believed that this ability to describe social groups could provide the insight people needed to help foster social change. Like other social sciences, the development of sociology was intertwined with the historical events of that time period. Sociology developed at the same time as some of the most historic clashes between economic and political groups in recent history. Therefore, the study of socioeconomic classes and the relative merits and drawbacks of capitalism and socialism were important components of early sociological theories. Some early sociological theorists who focused on these issues include: Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, W.E.B. DuBois, and Harriet Martineau. However, the most famous classical sociological theorist from that time is mistakenly thought, by many, to have been a politician. Karl Marx’s theory of Marxism, which certainly influenced political theories and political systems from the late nineteenth century through the present time, was actually a sociological theorist.

As the study of group behavior became more popular around the world, it developed into an academic discipline. In 1876, Yale University offered the United States’ first sociology course. By the early 1900s, sociology was offered at most United States’ colleges. Sociology focuses on a diverse variety of areas, including: economics, religion, politics, mental health, education, work, children, families, the elderly, emotions, sexuality, gender, and the law. [ Show Less ]

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Perspectives From My Discipline
There are several points of correlation between sociology, psychology, and the fledgling field of human rights. One of the most prudent psychological applications that could help the field of human rights would involve analyzing the cognitive processes for the justification of human rights violators on an international level. In terms of sociology, it would be interesting to study how the America's social structure that reinforces democracy plays a part in creating conditions in which human rights violations occur.
Paper Undergraduate
Indian Givers by Jack Weatherford: Book Review
Jack Weatherford's 1988 book Indian Givers: How Native Americans Transformed the World, described the many contributions that the Native peoples of the Americas have made to world civilization from the 16th Century to the present, which have generally been ignored by mainstream academics and the general public.
Paper Doctorate
Single Parenting and Its Effects on Children's Academic Achievement
Single parent families are a reality and there is a large body of empirical evidence documenting the disadvantages of children raised in single-parent homes. These disadvantages include areas of academic achievement such as a these children having a higher probability of lower overall GPA scores, poorer rates of graduation from high school, poorer rates of college attendance as well as other disadvantages such as increased risk for drug abuse
Paper High School
Social stratification systems: caste versus class
The parallels between the caste system in East India and the class system in the United States shed light on the vast economic inequality that subsumes America. It is undeniable that there are stark differences between…
Research Paper Doctorate
Marx's concept of alienation and its assessment
Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, And the Development of the Concept of Alienation
Research Paper Doctorate
Understanding current events through three social science disciplines
Current Events Explained, Analyzed, And Perceived
Paper Masters
Pornography: A Growing Problem Behind
In today's technologically savvy world, pornography is as easy to access as it has ever been. With pornographic and obscene materials easily available for view by men, women, and children, it is reasonable to assume…
Paper Doctorate
Racial profiling of Black men in public spaces
Racial profiling is not new, however, and was a theory of sociology in the late 19th century known as Social Darwinism. Incorrectly using Darwin's theory of evolution, the Social Darwinists believed that some species were morally superior to others, and even some races superior to others. This has evolved into believing that certain races are more prone to criminal activity.
Research Paper Doctorate
Consumer Choice / Behavioral Economics
Economics is about scarcity. The word 'scarcity' is used here in a special sense: it refers to a state of affairs in which, given the wants of a society at any particular moment, the means available to satisfy them are…
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Max Weber's sociological theory and the McDonaldization of society
McDonaldization seen from a sociological point-of-view