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Perspectives and Paradigms

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Title: Perspectives and Paradigms


1
Perspectivesand Paradigms
2
Perspectives Why?
  • Why?
  • Cant see everything at once
  • Therefore, we focus and ignore
  • For example, portraits
  • Scientists cant observe everything at once
  • DIGRESSION science is both noun and verb
  • To non-scis, sci is body of knowledge
  • To scientists, science is activity to change body
    of knowledge
  • Doing science usually requires narrowing focus

3
Perspectives in SiamA Fable
  • Three Blind Men and an Elephant
  • Whether or not youve heard this story before,
    you can be sure you will hear it in the future

4
sevitcepsrePSo What?
  • So what?
  • What you see depends on
  • Where you observe
  • In front? In back?
  • How you observe
  • Telescope? Microscope?
  • What you are looking for
  • Depends on the color of your glasses
  • Whats actually there
  • Empirical!!!

5
Sociological Perspectives Based on Size and Focal
Behavior
  • We will examine sociological perspectives that
    differ in
  • Levels of analysis
  • Conceptions of what are the most important social
    phenomena

6
Levels of Analysis
  • Microsociology
  • Mesosociology
  • Macrosociology
  • Often meso is considered a form of macro

7
Three Different Ideas About Whats Most Important
I
  • Creation and maintenance of social integration
  • Functionalist perspective
  • Structural functionalist
  • Individuals and groups trying to maximize
    interests
  • Conflict perspective

8
Three Different Ideas About Whats Most Important
II
  • Active individual trying to make sense of a
    situation and give it meaning
  • Symbolic interactionism

9
Whats Most Important?Functionalist Perspective
  • Consensus or Functionalist
  • Officially structural-functionalism
  • I also call the consensus perspective
  • The most important elements of social life are
    those that foster social integration
  • Hobbesian problem of order
  • How is society possible?
  • Interested in how parts of society (structure)
    work together

10
Whats Most Important?Conflict Perspective
  • Conflict
  • Social life is a constant battle between
    individuals or groups, each seeking to maximize
    their interests
  • Interests outcomes that benefit the actor
  • One form of conflict zero sum game

11
Conflict PerspectiveZero Sum Game
  • Zero sum game - situation in which total amount
    of some goody is fixed. Only way one actor can
    get more is for one or more others to get less

12
Whats Most Important?Symbolic Interactionism
  • Symbolic interactionism
  • The most important aspect of social life is the
    active individual trying to make sense out of a
    situation and give it meaning
  • Also called interactionism
  • Seems to be the most difficult perspective for
    students to recognize

13
Symbolic InteractionismInteraction and Symbols
  • Symbolic interactionism because individual
    makes sense of situation largely through
    interactions with other people
  • Interactions at the time and in the past
  • Symbolic interactionism because interactions
    and meanings depend on symbols

14
Symbolic InteractionismMicro and Macro
  • Focus on interaction makes SI microsociological
  • That many symbols are widely shared brings in
    macro
  • Like social facts, symbols can be outside us

15
Symbolic InteractionismThomas Theorem
  • If men define situations as real, they are real
    in their consequences
  • W.I. Thomas D.S. Thomas (1928)
  • More narrowly,People decide what to do next on
    the basis of what they think is going on now
  • This is the version I usually use on exams

16
The Two Questions Constantly Facing Each Actor
  • Whats going on?
  • What do I do now?
  • Answer to Whats going on? is the definition of
    the situation
  • Example of subjective reality
  • The answer to What do I do now? is actors
    actual behavior.
  • Example of objective reality

17
Two Questions II
  • The Thomas Theorem states that answer to What do
    I do now? depends on answer to What is going
    on?"

18
Verstehen and the Thomas Theorem
  • Verstehen to understand situation from actors
    point of view
  • Practical Uses of the Thomas Theorem to
    understand or predict behavior of others
  • To use Thomas Theorem, need to know how actor
    sees situation. One way to find out is to use
    Verstehen.

19
Verstehen Is Useful
  • Verstehen probably most practically useful thing
    you will learn in this course

20
Review
  • Levels of analysis (micro, meso, macro)
  • Three important perspectives based on what is
    considered most important
  • Central issue of functionalism
  • Hobbesian problem of order
  • Central issue for conflict
  • Zero-sum game

21
More Review
  • Central issue in symbolic interactionism
  • Why interactionism?
  • Why symbolic?
  • Thomas theorem
  • Verstehen

22
Apply Perspectives to Football
23
Perspectives and Giddens et al Essentials of
Sociology 3rd
  • Our textbook identifies five perspectives instead
    of the three we covered
  • Symbolic interactionism
  • Same as in lecture
  • Functionalism
  • Same as in lecture
  • Marxism and class conflict
  • Considered part of the conflict perspective

24
Perspectives and Giddens et al Essentials of
Sociology 3rd (2)
  • Feminism and feminist theory
  • Considered mostly part of the conflict approach
  • 5. Postmodernism
  • Hard to know where to put it. Somewhere between
    conflict and symbolic interactionism

25
Perspectives and Paradigms
  • Perspectives sometimes called paradigms
  • Paradigms help working scientists
  • Help specify what problems are important
  • Help specify how to go about solving problems
  • In ways convincing to other scientists
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