Week+1 +part+2
Week+1 +part+2
Week+1 +part+2
Knowledge II
Week 1. Part 2. What is Sociology? The Emergence of Sociology.
A X A M A L I S S A L I Y E VA , T E A C H I N G P R O F E S S O R
A _ I S S A L I Y E VA @ K A Z G U U . K Z
Overview of lesson:
Emergence of Sociology
Founders of Sociology
Summing up
Required sources
Sociology emerged as a field of
research during the political,
economic, and intellectual
upgrading of the 18th and 19th
centuries. Rationalism and science
replaced tradition and belief as
methods of understanding the world,
leading to changes in government,
education, economic production,
and even religion and family life.
Electricity
generator
He was the first who applied the scientific methods to study social
events. Once scientists figured out the laws of social behavior, he
believed, that they would be able to predict and control it.
He recognized that an understanding of society requires a concern for
both the sources of order and the sources of change (cause and
effect).
Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) argued that evolution led to the development of social,
as well as natural life. He viewed society as similar to a giant organism.
Much more controversial is Marx’s argument that the social scientist should also be
a social activist.
Emile Durkheim’s (1858–1917) research focused on understanding how
societies remain stable and how stable societies foster individual happiness.
Durkheim’s legacy is a theory that highlights social stability.
One of Durkheim’s major concerns was the balance between social regulation
and personal freedom.
Durkheim was among the first to stress the importance of using reliable statistics.
He strove to be an objective observer who only sought the facts.
Max Weber (1864–1920) wrote on religion, bureaucracy, method, and politics. He
believed that knowing patterns of behavior was less important than understanding the
meanings people attach to behavior (instead of accounting, it is more important to
understand how the meaning of divorce has changed over time).
He tried to show how social and religious values can affect economic systems. It's major
thesis is that the religious values of early Protestantism (self-discipline, thrift, and
individualism) were the foundation for capitalism.
He thought that sociology must be value-free. Weber argued that sociology should be
concerned with establishing what is and not what ought to be. Thus, although one may
study poverty or racial inequality because of a sense of moral outrage, such feelings
must be set aside to achieve an objective grasp of the facts.
Summing up
1. Sociology is the systematic study of social behavior. Sociologists use the concepts of role and
social structure to analyze common human dramas. When we use the sociological
imagination, we focus on understanding how social structures affect individual behavior and
personal troubles.
2. The rapid social change that followed the industrial revolution was an important inspiration
for the development of sociology. Problems caused by rapid social change stimulated the
demand for accurate information about social processes. This social-problems orientation
remains an important aspect of sociology.
3. Whose point is the most relevant nowadays (A.Comte, H.Spencer, K.Marx, E.Durkheim,
M.Weber)? Explain why?
Reference
1. Brinkerhoff, D. B., Weitz, R., & Ortega, S. T. (2011). Essentials of sociology (8th ed.).
Wadsworth/Cengage Learning. Chapter 1.