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Chapter 1. Groups and Relationships: A Sociological Sampler Key Terms. Science A method for describing and explaining why and how things work. It consists of two components: theory and research.
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Chapter 1 Groups and Relationships: A Sociological SamplerKey Terms
ScienceA method for describing and explaining why and how things work. It consists of two components: theory and research. Social sciencesThose scientific fields devoted to the study of human behavior, including sociology, psychology, economics, political science, anthropology, criminology, and some branches of history.
TheoryAn abstract statement that explains why and how certain things take place, whether these things be eclipses of the moon, chemical reactions, or outbursts of racism. In addition scientific theories must have empirical implications. That is, theories make definite predictions and prohibitions; they say some things will happen under certain circumstances and that other things will not happen.
Sociological imaginationA term coined by American sociologist C. Wright Mills to describe the ability to see the link between incidents in the lives of individuals and large social forces. • SociologyThe scientific study of the patterns and processes of human social relations.
Units of analysisThe “things” on which a set of research observations are based. Sociologists use many different units of analysis; among them are individuals, small groups, large organizations, counties, cities, states, and nations. MicrosociologyThe study of small groups and of face to face interaction among humans.
MacrosociologyThe study of large groups and even of whole societies. ConceptsNames used to identify some set or class of things that are said to be alike. Concepts are the building blocks of theories.
GroupTwo or more persons who maintain a stable pattern of social relations over a significant period of time. AggregateA collection of people lacking social relations; for example, pedestrians waiting for a walk light.
Primary groupsGroups whose members have close and intimate emotional attachments to one another. Secondary groupsGroups whose members have only limited emotional attachments to one another.
Social solidarityThe density and emotional intensity of attachments within a group; put another way, the capacity of group members to generate a sort of glue that enables them to stick together, to “belong,” to be loyal. Social conflictUnfriendly interactions between groups, ranging from disagreements to violent encounters. For a conflict to be social, at least three people must be involved.
NetworkA pattern of ties or connections among some set of units, as a computer network links many computers and a TV network links many local stations, allowing them to communicate and exchange. • Social networkA pattern of social relationships or links among some set of social units—usually people, but sometimes groups.
Social relationshipRepeated actions between social units, or the persistence of stable, shared features among units. • Unobtrusive measuresTechniques used to measure behavior without disturbing the behavior of the subjects.
Validation researchStudies conducted to determine whether particular measures used in research are accurate. • OperationalizeTo select measures of concepts in order to make it possible to perform observational operations on them.
HypothesisA statement about the expected relationship between (or among) observable measures of concepts. • Free willThe philosophical and theological doctrine that humans possess the capacity for choosing among alternatives and, therefore, can be held responsible for the choices they make.