Sociology is the study of human social relationships and institutions. Sociologists examine topics as diverse as crime and religion, family and the state, the divisions of race and social class, the shared beliefs of cultures, and social stability and radical changes throughout entire societies.
Levels of Analysis
Sociologists analyze society through two main lenses:
- Micro-level: Studies small groups and individual interactions. For example, a micro-level study might look at the rules of conversation among business professionals.
- Macro-level: Looks at trends among and between large groups and societies. For instance, a macro-level analysis might research how language use has changed over time in social media.
Focus Areas
The discipline investigates the causes and consequences of social behavior across several key domains:- Socialization: The lifelong process through which individuals learn the culture of their society and develop their human potential.
- Deviance and Social Control: Studying violations of social norms and how society regulates behavior through sanctions (rewards and punishments).
- Social Stratification: The hierarchical arrangement of large social groups based on their control over basic resources (wealth, power, education). This includes the study of class, race, and gender inequality.
- Social Institutions: Organized systems of social behavior that meet fundamental societal needs and maintain order, such as government, education, family, healthcare, religion, and the economy.
- Race, Gender, and Class: Investigating how these attributes intersect to create different experiences of privilege and disadvantage (Intersection Theory).
Theoretical Perspectives
Theoretical perspectives in sociology are sets of assumptions about the nature of social life that guide research and analysis. These perspectives, also known as paradigms, provide frameworks for explaining how society influences people and how people influence society. While there are various specific theories, three major perspectives dominate the discipline:-
Functionalism: This macro-level perspective views society as a complex system of interrelated parts that work together to maintain social stability and order.
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Conflict Theory: This macro-level perspective views society as a competition for limited resources where social institutions reflect and maintain inherent inequalities.
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Symbolic Interactionism: This micro-level perspective focuses on one-on-one interactions and the exchange of meaning through language and symbols to understand how people make sense of their social worlds.
Summary of Perspectives in Application
| Topic | Functionalism | Conflict Theory | Symbolic Interactionism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Society | A stable system of interrelated parts. | A struggle for power and resources. | The sum of individual interactions. |
| Inequality | Inevitable and functional; ensures important roles are filled. | Result of exploitation; benefits the powerful. | Shaped by how people define status and class in daily life. |
| Crime | Clarifies boundaries; results from strain (anomie). | Laws protect the powerful; crime is a response to inequality. | Learned through interaction; created by labeling. |
| Family | Socializes children; stabilizes adult personalities. | Site of gender inequality and power struggles. | Site of micro-level interactions and identity formation. |
Methodological Approaches
Sociologists use a variety of research methods to build a body of knowledge:
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Scientific Method: A six-step process involving asking a question, researching existing sources, formulating a hypothesis, designing a study, drawing conclusions, and reporting results.
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Quantitative Sociology: Uses statistical methods like surveys with large numbers of participants to uncover patterns of human behavior.
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Qualitative Sociology: Seeks to understand behavior through in-depth interviews, focus groups, and content analysis.
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Interpretive Framework: An approach that seeks to understand social worlds from the point of view of participants, focusing on in-depth understanding rather than generalizable results.
Sociological Purpose
The ultimate goal of sociology is to develop the sociological imagination.
This is an awareness of the relationship between a person’s individual behavior and experience and the wider culture that shapes their choices and perceptions.
It teaches people to see their own lives in relationship to history and social structure, helping them understand how personal choices (like marriage or employment) are influenced by social forces.
History & Founders
Auguste Comte (1798–1857)
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Father of Sociology: While the term was first coined in 1780 by Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, Auguste Comte reintroduced it in 1838 and is widely considered the field’s founder.
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Positivism: Comte named the scientific study of social patterns positivism.
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Scientific Method: He believed that social scientists could study society using the same objective, scientific methods used in natural sciences like physics or biology.
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Social Reform: Comte held that once scholars identified the laws governing society, they could use that knowledge to address social ills such as poverty and poor education
Harriet Martineau (1802-1876)
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First Female Sociologist: Martineau was an early analyst of various social practices, including religion, economics, social class, and women’s rights.
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Introduction to the Anglosphere: She translated Comte’s works from French into English, introducing the discipline to English-speaking scholars.
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Systematic Comparisons: In her works Society in America (1837) and Retrospect of Western Travel (1838), she conducted the first systematic methodological international comparisons of social institutions.
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Critique of Capitalism: Martineau pointed out inconsistencies between the professed moral principles in the U.S. and the reality of a free enterprise system that exploited workers and denied women’s rights.
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
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Conflict Theory: Rejecting Comte’s positivism, Marx believed that societies grow and change as a result of the struggle between different social classes over the means of production.
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Capitalism and Inequality: Writing during the Industrial Revolution, he observed that capitalism led to extreme disparities in wealth between factory owners (bourgeoisie) and laborers (proletariat).
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Revolution and Communism: Marx predicted that capitalist inequalities would eventually lead workers to revolt, causing the system to collapse and be replaced by communism, an equitable system where everything is owned communally.
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
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Social Organism: Spencer rejected the ideas of both Comte and Marx, instead favoring a government that allowed market forces to control capitalism.
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Survival of the Fittest: He is often associated with the phrase “survival of the fittest,” which he used to express natural selection in a social context, comparing the preservation of favored races to biological selection.
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Influence: His work heavily influenced early sociologists, including Émile Durkheim.
Georg Simmel (1858-1918)
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Anti-Positivism: Simmel took an anti-positivist stance, focusing on individual identity in city life and the function of money.
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Micro-Level Theories: Much of his work concentrated on the dynamics of small groups, specifically two-person (dyads) and three-person (triads) interactions.
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Individual Culture: He emphasized the creative capacities of individuals within their broader culture.
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
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Formal Academic Discipline: Emile Durkheim legitimized sociology as a formal academic discipline by establishing the first European department of sociology at the University of Bordeaux in 1895.
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Social Facts: He believed sociologists could study objective social facts – such as laws, morals, and religious beliefs – to determine if a society was “healthy” (stable) or “pathological” (experiencing a breakdown in norms).
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Study of Suicide: In his landmark work Suicide (1897), he used statistics to show that suicide rates differed between Catholic and Protestant communities due to socio-religious forces rather than individual psychology
George Herbert Mead (1863-1931)
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Significant Others: Specific individuals who have a major impact on a person’s life.
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Generalized Others: The organized and generalized attitude of a larger social group.
Max Weber (1864-1920)
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Verstehen: Weber introduced the concept of verstehen (to understand in a deep way), arguing that researchers must take the influence of culture into account and try to understand a social world from an insider’s point of view.
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Anti-Positivism: He proposed that social researchers should strive for subjectivity to represent cultural norms and societal values accurately.
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Capitalism and Religion: He is best known for The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1904), which explores how religious beliefs, particularly Calvinism, potentially led to the rise of capitalism.
Theoretical Perspectives
1. Functionalism (Structural Functionalism)
This macro-level perspective views society as a stable, orderly system composed of interrelated parts, or social institutions, that work together to maintain stability.
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The Organism Analogy: Influenced by Herbert Spencer, this theory compares society to a living body where different “organs” (institutions like family, education, and the economy) perform specific functions for the survival of the whole.
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Dynamic Equilibrium: In a healthy society, all parts work together to maintain stability, a state later sociologists called dynamic equilibrium.
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Types of Functions: Robert Merton distinguished between different consequences of social processes:
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Manifest Functions: The sought or anticipated consequences of a social process.
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Latent Functions: The unsought or unrecognized consequences of a social process.
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Dysfunctions: Social processes that have undesirable consequences for the operation of society.
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2. Conflict Theory
This macro-level perspective views society as a continuous power struggle for control of scarce resources.
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Inequality and Power: Rooted in the work of Karl Marx, it emphasizes that social institutions reflect competition and inherent inequalities.
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Resource Competition: Individuals and groups compete for limited social, material, and political resources like food, housing, employment, and education.
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Maintenance of Power: Those who obtain more resources (“winners”) use their power and influence to maintain social institutions, often resulting in the perpetuation of oppression.
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Bases of Struggle: Modern conflict theorists analyze how class, race, gender, and ethnicity serve as bases for the struggle for power and resources.
3. Symbolic Interactionism
This micro-level perspective focuses on the specific, face-to-face interactions among individuals and how they interpret these interactions through communication.
Social Construction of Reality: Reality is cognitively constructed by humans through social interaction. This is linked to the Thomas Theorem, which states that if men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences.
Symbols and Language: Interaction relies heavily on shared symbols, such as language and gestures, to create a mutual understanding of the social world.
Meaning-Making: Humans interact with things based on the meanings ascribed to them; these meanings are derived from interactions with others and interpreted in specific circumstances.
Dramaturgical Analysis: Erving Goffman developed this technique, using theater as an analogy for social interaction, where individuals are viewed as “actors” performing cultural “scripts”.
Methods
Sociology was conceived as having methods in parallel with the natural sciences. As a result, the field has a distinct set of methods suited to different situations. There are four major kinds of sociological research methods: surveys, field research, experiments, and secondary data analysis.
Survey Method
Surveys collect data from participants who respond to a series of questions about behaviors and opinions, often in the form of a questionnaire.
This allows participants anonymity in expressing their personal ideas.
One major example of a survey that sociologists have used is the U.S. census, which identifies people living in the United States based on their location, ethnicity, social status, and a number of other factors.
Although surveys are flawed in capturing the ways that people actually behave in social situations, they give insight into how people say they think and feel.
Field Research
Field research, on the other hand, refers to gathering primary data from the world outside of a lab experiment or survey. In conducting field research, sociologists step into new environments, and observe and participate in the world of others.
This research can take place in locations ranging from a coffee shop to a remote tribal island.
Sociological experiments can be conducted either in the lab or in the field. In a lab, experiments can be controlled in a way that produces more data in a set period of time.
Experiments
Meanwhile, in a field-based experiment, the information generated may be considered to be more accurate due to it being collected without the intervention of a researcher.
In setting up experiments, sociologists create artificial situations that allow them to manipulate variables.
Sociologists typically select a group of people with similar characteristics, such as age, class, race, or education, and create an experimental and control group. While the experimental group is exposed to a variable that the researcher has and can change, the control group is not.
Secondary Data Analysis
Finally, secondary data analysis is the analysis based on work already completed by other researchers.
These researchers can be historians, economists, teachers, or other sociologists, and data can come from periodicals, newspapers, magazines, or some other source.
Oftentimes, secondary data analysis can lead to sociologists interpreting findings in a way that was not part of the author’s original purpose or attention.
For example, a sociologist looking to investigate social attitudes toward propaganda in the second world war may read newspaper articles and watch briefings from the early 1940s.
Using already available data is useful for sociologists in that it is nonreactive or unobtrusive research. Because sociologists do not have direct contact with the people who created the media they are examining, they cannot alter or influence people’s behaviors.
However, the sheer mass of previously existing sociological data presents its own set of challenges in finding a systematic way to sort through vast libraries of materials to glean information related to what a particular sociologist is looking to study.
Sociology vs. Psychology
Sociology and Psychology both seek to understand behavior — however, they do so on different scales. While psychology focuses on the mind and understanding the individual, sociology focuses on social groups, institutions, and cultures.
Psychologists focus on researching, analyzing, and managing the factors that drive or impact the behavior of individuals, such as mental processes or desire.
Meanwhile, sociologists tend to look outward at large-scale societal issues such as cultural norms, social institutions, and interactions with others.
Although a sociologist may study the behavior of individuals, they more often do so in the context of understanding how broader social forces influence that individual.
BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester
Editor-in-Chief for Simply Psychology
Saul McLeod, PhD., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years of experience in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.
BSc (Hons) Psychology, MSc Psychology of Education
Associate Editor for Simply Psychology
Olivia Guy-Evans is a writer and associate editor for Simply Psychology, where she contributes accessible content on psychological topics. She is also an autistic PhD student at the University of Birmingham, researching autistic camouflaging in higher education.
Charlotte Nickerson is a graduate of Harvard University obsessed with the intersection of mental health, productivity, and design.