A. social stratification
B. social control
C. social conflict
D. social solidarity
Introduction to Sociology
Introduction to Sociology
A. George Herbert Mead
B. Kari Marx
C. Em-ile Durkheim
D. Max Weber
A. macrosociology
B. the dramaturgical approach
C. Verstehen
D. I,m O.K, you,re O.k
A. a manifest function
B. a latent function
C. a dysfunction
D. a manifest dysfunction
A. successfully combining theory and research
B. an analysis of deviant behavior that focuses on societal goals and means
C. an attempt to bring macro-and micro level analyses together
D. all of the above
A. suicide rates and how they varied from county to country
B. personalities of individual suicide victims
C. means people used to take their own lives
D. effects of suicide on the families of victims
A. its theories are logical explicit and supported by empirical evidence
B. sociologists collect data in a relatively objective and systematic way
C. ideas and research findings are scrutinized by other sociologists
D. all of the above
A. human behavior is meaningful and varies between individuals and cultures
B. it is difficult for sociologists to gain access to a research laboratory
C. sociologists are not rational or critical enough in their approach
D. we cannot collect empirical data about social life
A. creative activities such as gardening cookery and craftwork
B. the symbolic representation of social groups in the mass media
C. religious beliefs about how the world ought to be
D. rules and expectation about interaction that regulate social life
A. the household
B. the office
C. the global village
D. the nation states