Book No.002 (Sociology)

Book Name Sociology (C.N. Shankar Rao)

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1. DEFINITION OF SOCIOLOGY

2. NATURE OF SOCIOLOGY

3. SUBJECT-MATTER AND SCOPE OF SOCIOLOGY

4. SCOPE OF SOCIOLOGY

4.1. The Specialistic or Formalistic School

4.2. The Synthetic School

5. USE OF SOCIOLOGY

6. THE THREE MAJOR THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES OF SOCIOLOGY

6.1. The Concept of “Theoretical Perspective”

6.2. Types of Major Perspective in Sociology

6.3. An Evaluation of these Three Perspectives

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Definition, Scope and Uses of Sociology

C.N. Shankar Rao

Chapter – 2

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Harshit Sharma

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Table of Contents

Sociology – The Science of Society

  • Men have always lived in societies, from primitive Polynesian to modern American societies, and all exhibit common elements and constant features.
  • These elements give society its form, shape, and structure, comprising the social order.
  • General sociology aims to discover these constants, describe them concisely, and explain their inter-relations.
  • Sociology is the science of society and uniquely studies society in its entirety, unlike other sciences.
  • Economics focuses on man as a wealth-getter and wealth-disposer and studies relations of wealth and welfare.
  • History deals with the human past in a time order.
  • Cultural Anthropology studies primitive man and his culture, particularly in primitive communities.
  • Psychology studies the individual as a behaving individual.
  • Social Psychology explores how the individual reacts to social conditions.
  • Political Science studies man as a citizen, ruler, or ruled.
  • Religion deals with man as a spiritual being and his faith in the supernatural.
  • Sociology alone studies social relationships and society itself.
  • Sociology’s focus distinguishes it from other social sciences.
  • Sociology studies social relationships because they are social, not due to their economic, political, religious, legal, or educational nature.
  • Society is the intricate, ever-changing pattern of the totality of these relationships.
  • Sociology does not study everything in society but focuses on how elements like culture, religion, art, and inventionsshed light on social relationships.
  • Sociology studies how relations combine, build systems, and respond to changes, making it an analytical study.

DEFINITION OF SOCIOLOGY

  • Sociology emerged as an independent social science in the 19th century, previously treated as social philosophy or the philosophy of history.
  • Auguste Comte, a Frenchman, is considered the father of sociology and coined the term sociology in 1839.
  • The word “sociology” is derived from socius (companion/associate) and logos (science/study), meaning the science of society.
  • John Stuart Mill proposed the term ethology for the new science, but Herbert Spencer popularized the term sociology.
  • Despite various contributions, sociology became the permanent name for the new science.
  • The question “What is sociology?” pertains to the definition of sociology, which is difficult to define comprehensively and briefly.
  • There is no single satisfactory definition of sociology, with many definitions proposed by different sociologists.
  • Some notable definitions:
    1. Auguste Comte: Sociology is the science of social phenomena subject to natural and invariable laws.
    2. Kingsley Davis: Sociology is a general science of society.
    3. Harry M. Johnson: Sociology is the science that deals with social groups.
    4. Emile Durkheim: Sociology is the science of social institutions.
    5. Park: Sociology is the science of collective behaviour.
    6. Small: Sociology is the science of social relations.
    7. Marshal Jones: Sociology is the study of man-in-relationship-to-men.
    8. Ogburn and Nimkoff: Sociology is the scientific study of social life.
    9. Franklin Henry Giddings: Sociology is the science of social phenomena.
    10. Henry Fairchild: Sociology is the study of man and his human environment in their relations.
    11. Max Weber: Sociology is the science of interpretative understanding of social action to explain its course and effects.
    12. Alex Inkeles: Sociology is the study of systems of social action and their inter-relations.
    13. Kimball Young and Raymond W. Mack: Sociology is the scientific study of the social aspects of human life.
    14. Morris Ginsberg: Sociology is the study of human interactions and inter-relations, their conditions and consequences.
  • Divergence in the definitions shows different approaches to sociology.
  • Despite variations, all definitions share the common focus on man, social relations, and society.

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