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Title: Sociology 001


1
Sociology 001
  • Week 1 1st Half
  • Introduction

2
Course Section
  • Sociology 001
  • 3785 INTRO SOCIOLOGY
  • M, W 0200PM - 0320PM, South Annex, Room 15
  • 3803 INTRO SOCIOLOGY
  • T, Th 0800AM - 0920AM, W. Annex, Room 1
  • 3763 INTRO SOCIOLOGY
  • T, Th 1230PM - 0150PM, EVC, Room 7
  • Luís Villanueva
  • Mr. Vee

3
Cliques
  • who hung out together based on region, that is,
    where they lived congregated together on school
    activities, such as jocks and nerds came
    together in a group centered on social class,
    whether middle-class, working-class, or recent
    migrant or del rancho
  • you will learn about the intellectual tools that
    seem simple in seeking understanding of group
    differences and human behaviors, yet require for
    you to broaden your perspective and connect the
    dots

4
Sociological Mindfulness
  • Sociology makes us think deeply about the divide
    between ourselves and those of different races,
    classes, and ethnicities and I would include
    gender and sexualities. It forces us to
    recognize the effects of power, technological
    advances, and that increasingly rapid process of
    social change on our own lives. Sociology
    mattersto you, me, and everyone with a stake in
    the society we live in (Scaheffer 2008vii).

5
Intellect, Life, History
  • Rather than display the contents of our shining
    intellectual toolbox, I try to put the tools to
    use. Michael Schwalbe
  • An unexamined life is not worth living.
    Socrates
  • "He who does not remember the past is condemned
    to repeat it. Santayana

6
Sociological Analysis
  • If people made social conditions, then people can
    change them either to be mutually beneficial or
    not.
  • how and why is one group of people privileged and
    another is not?
  • we will learn how to take things sociologically
    apart

7
FILL OUT A CARD
  • Name
  • Major
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Ethnicity
  • Optional (religion, area, sexuality, etc.)
  • Why taking SOC 001?
  • What do you expect to learn from this class?

8
Grades
  • Each of the first three exams will have 50
    multiple questions and is worth 20 of your
    course grade.
  • The final exam will have 40 multiple questions
    and 4 short essay questions.

9
Assignments
  • on each assignment, write your name, SOC 001,
    section , assignment , and date
  • write or type papers clearly, and staple papers
    or assignmentlest you lose points
  • save your graded assignments at least until the
    end of the semester

10
Is Sociology just common sense?
  • we often use common sense to help us make sense
    of facts or what we have observed in our daily
    lives
  • Birds of a flock
  • Opposites attract
  • Jump in a chance
  • Out of sight, out of mind
  • Look before you leap
  • Sociologists utilize science rather than rely on
    superstition to explain social phenomena

11
What is the difference between a scientific
theory and a superstitious belief?
  • theory is a set of statements that seeks to
    explain problems, actions, or behavior (p7)
  • scientific theories should be consistent,
    parsimonious, correctable, empirically
    testable/verifiable, useful, and progressive
  • The validity of superstitions is based on belief
    in the power of magic or things one cannot simply
    explain due to ones limited knowledge

12
Sociological Findings versus Common Sense
  • More US students are shot to death at school now
    than ten or fifteen years ago.
  • According to the National School Safety Center,
    more students were shot to death at US schools in
    the early 1990s than now.

13
Adapting to Life Conditions
  • the human species uses its faculties of
    consciousness, conceptual thought and symbolic
    language to continue to advance by means of
    social (rather than genetic) evolution
  • the three parts of the brain
  • with the reptilian inner core the most primitive
    (appetite, fear, lust, aggression, instincts),
  • next the limbic brain (emotions, empathy),
  • lastly the cortex (higher reason, cognitive)

14
Societies and Their Transformations
  • How do mental developments and social
    transformations come about?
  • How did our minds evolve or our society develop?
  • A society is a fairly large number of people who
    live in the same territory, are relatively
    independent of people outside it, and participate
    in a common culture (Schaeffer 38).

15
Social Change and Sociology
  • Three significant changes transformed society
  • a factory-based economy,
  • the explosive growth of cities,
  • and new ideas about democracy and political
    rights

16
Comtes Law of Three Stages
  • theological stage, people took a religious view
    that society expressed Gods will
  • metaphysical stage in which people saw society as
    a natural rather than supernatural phenomenonthe
    mind supposesabstract forces capable of
    producing all phenomena
  • positive stage, explanations are based on
    scientific laws discovered through
  • Experimentation
  • Observation
  • Logic

17
Social Revolutions that Transformed Societies
  • Societies transformed based on their level of
    technology, communication, and economy
  • 1) hunters and gatherers,
  • 2) horticulture,
  • 3) agrarian,
  • 4) industrial
  • 5) postindustrial

18
Hunting, Gathering Societies
  • depend on hunting and gathering for their survival

19
Pastoral, Horticultural Societies
  • are based on the cultivation of plants by the use
    of hand tools

20
Agrarian, Agricultural Societies
  • many more people were able to engage in
    activities other than farmingto develop the
    things properly known as culture,

21
Industrial Societies
  • machinery giving you a form of production in the
    industrial society which was far more efficient
    and brought even greater surplus
  • What was the key to the industrial revolution?
  • urban migrants face many social problems,
  • pollution,
  • crime,
  • homelessness,
  • inequality

22
Political Change
  • a shift from a focus on peoples moral duties to
    God and king to the pursuit of self interests
  • each citizen has
  • certain inalienable rights,
  • life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
  • Early sociologists were deeply troubled by the
    striking inequality of the new industrial society

23
Legitimizing Sociology
  • thinking or philosophizing about society is as
    old as when people began to make records of their
    activities
  • the classical sociological theorists observed and
    criticized the industrial revolution and its
    impact on societies
  • legitimizing sociology as a social science

24
Food for Thought
  • what social changes have you seen occurring?
  • Are the social conditions of the average American
    improving or getting worse?
  • How are you personally connected to somebody in
    your neighborhood, in another state, or in
    another country?
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