Sociological Theory: Auguste Comte's Theory In Society

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A sociological theory is a statement of how and why specific facts are related, and the explain aspects of the social world enabling predictions about future events or guiding further sociological analyses. Sociologists develop these theories to explain social phenomena, proposing a relationship between two or more concepts. In general, the appeal of social theory derives from the fact that it takes the focus away from the individual and focuses it on the society itself (contributors, 2015). An example of this would be the work of Robert Putnam on the decline of civic engagement. He found that Americans involvement in civic life declined over the last forty to sixty years, and his theory proposes: The more television people watch, the lower …show more content…

He played a key role in the development of the social sciences and hoped to unify all studies of humankind through the scientific understanding of the social realm. His key development was the idea of applying the scientific method to the social world, known as positivism whilst the French revolution was still fresh in his mind. Just as this method had revealed the law of gravity, it could also uncover the laws that underlie society. Comte could conclude this by considering questions such as ‘What creates social order instead of chaos?’ and ‘Once society sets off on a particular course, what causes it to change?’ (Smith, n.d.). As Positivism tends to give emphasis to human relative real experience; therefore, it is relatively connected with empiricism (Positivism A relative Connect With Enlightenment Philosophy, …show more content…

One being the collective conscience which is common to our group in its entirety, the other that Durkheim labels “Anomie” which represents us as personal and distinct, and makes us an individual. This roughly translates to alienation but doesn’t fully convey the suddenness or oddness of the situation a person may find themselves in. The term would soon become an explanation for one of three basic types of suicide that Durkheim generalizes in his main study on suicide. In the hypothesis, he explored current explanations for suicide as he felt the differences in rates suggested that more individual factors were operating and that the basic causes of suicide were social in nature. After comparing the rates of urban and rural areas, different religious groups, and so on, to test his hypothesis, he found that the data seemed to fit a pattern which confirmed his hypothesis. From his evidence, Durkheim concluded that the suicide seemed to result from both high and low levels of social attachment, and this determined the suicide

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