The Practical Skeptic: Core Concepts in SociologyThe Practical Skeptic, a concise introduction to sociology, focuses on core concepts as the central building blocks for understanding sociology. Lisa McIntyre's straightforward, lively style and her emphasis on critical thinking make this an engaging and user-friendly text for students of all levels. Through this conversational narrative, students are able to grasp key sociological concepts and learn the essential lesson that there is much that goes on in the social world that escapes the sociologically untrained eye. |
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Page iii
... Durkheim 13 EXCERPT: EMILE DURKHEIM, From Suicide (1897) and The Rules ofthe Sociological Method (1904) 14 The Origins of Modern Sociology in Germany: Ferdinand Tonnies, Max Weber, and Karl Marx 16 EXCERPT: FERDINAND ToNNIEs, From ...
... Durkheim 13 EXCERPT: EMILE DURKHEIM, From Suicide (1897) and The Rules ofthe Sociological Method (1904) 14 The Origins of Modern Sociology in Germany: Ferdinand Tonnies, Max Weber, and Karl Marx 16 EXCERPT: FERDINAND ToNNIEs, From ...
Page 12
... Durkheim. The Origins of Modern Sociology in France: Emile Durkheim Like 12 CHAPTER 1 RESPONDING T0 CHAOS.
... Durkheim. The Origins of Modern Sociology in France: Emile Durkheim Like 12 CHAPTER 1 RESPONDING T0 CHAOS.
Page 13
... Durkheim said, to study society and social dynamics to find out what was going on. Yet, whereas many of his contemporaries were repelled by the individualism that had emerged in the late—eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Durkheim ...
... Durkheim said, to study society and social dynamics to find out what was going on. Yet, whereas many of his contemporaries were repelled by the individualism that had emerged in the late—eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Durkheim ...
Page 14
... DURKHEIM What Is a Social Fact? Sociological method as we practice it rests wholly on the basic principle that ... Durkheim to the point that was terrifying every— one else. If the collective conscience, or what people shared, was so ...
... DURKHEIM What Is a Social Fact? Sociological method as we practice it rests wholly on the basic principle that ... Durkheim to the point that was terrifying every— one else. If the collective conscience, or what people shared, was so ...
Page 15
... Durkheim stressed that social facts could not be reduced to psychological or biological facts. By this he meant that social facts (e.g., suicide rates) could be explained only by other social facts (e.g., changes in industry or the ...
... Durkheim stressed that social facts could not be reduced to psychological or biological facts. By this he meant that social facts (e.g., suicide rates) could be explained only by other social facts (e.g., changes in industry or the ...
Contents
2 | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | |
8 | |
16 | |
in Sociology | 40 |
Social Structure | 121 |
Rites of Passage | 165 |
Status Quo and Social Change | 187 |
Stratification and lnequality | 196 |
Class Systems | 202 |
Social Mobility and Open Versus Closed | 209 |
The Matthew Effect | 218 |
Race Ethnicity | 237 |
Prejudice | 245 |
Groups | 127 |
Chapter Review | 133 |
Societal Needs | 139 |
with an Institution in One Society Frequently | 148 |
How Socialization Works | 154 |
The Social Construction of Minority | 254 |
What to Do with What Youve Learned? | 260 |
Afterward | 266 |
Credits | 278 |
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American anomie answer behavior beliefs bureaucracy called chapter Church Comte concepts conflict crime culture defining deviance discrimination DuBois Durkheim earn effect Emile Durkheim ethnocentrism example expect explained Ferdinand Tonnies Galileo Gemeinschaft Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft gender Gesellschaft goal Here’s ideas important income individuals influenced institutions interaction labor latent functions live look macrosociology manifest function Marx Max Weber means Merton modern society nature negative sanctions Newton nonrational norms observed occupation one’s parents particular people’s percent perspective positive primary group problem professor questions race rational relationships religion role rules same-sex marriage social class social facts social structure social world sociological imagination sociologists sociology Spencer status status inconsistency subculture suicide tend term theory things Thomas theorem tion Tonnies understand University values variable W. E. B. DuBois Weber women words workers