Transcript LECTURE II:
LECTURE II:
THE HISTORY OF SOCIOLOGY. THE
DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIOLOGY OF
MEDICINE
Plan:
1. The first sociological institutions and researches.
2. Auguste Comte and his followers.
3. The main sociological schools:
social Darwinism;
race-anthropologic school;
geographic school;
the theory of imitation;
4. The main periods in the development of sociology
of medicine.
the early period;
the period of formation
the period of development;
the period of development as a science;
the modern period.
The first book with the term 'sociology' in its title
was The Study of Sociology (1874) by the
English philosopher Herbert Spencer.
In the United States, Lester Frank Ward,
described by some as the father of American
sociology, published Dynamic Sociology in 1883
and the discipline was taught by its own name
for the first time at the University of Kansas,
Lawrence in 1890 under the course title
Elements of Sociology (the oldest continuing
sociology course in America).
The Department of History and Sociology at the
University of Kansas was established in 1891 and the
first full-fledged independent university department of
sociology was established in 1892 at the University of
Chicago by Albion W. Small, who in 1895 founded the
American Journal of Sociology. The first European
department of sociology was founded in 1895 at the
University of Bordeaux by Émile Durkheim, founder of
L'Année Sociologique (1896). The first sociology
department to be established in the United Kingdom was
at the London School of Economics and Political
Science (home of the British Journal of Sociology) in
1904. In 1919 a sociology department was established in
Germany at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich
by Max Weber and in 1920 in Poland by Florian
Znaniecki.
International cooperation in sociology
began in 1893 when René Worms
founded the small Institut International de
Sociologie that was later on eclipsed by
the much larger International Sociological
Association starting in 1949 (ISA). 1905,
the American Sociological Association, the
world's largest association of professional
sociologists, was founded; 1909 as well
der Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie
Auguste Comte
Born 20.1.1798, died 1857
Author of Cours de Philosophie Positive (6
volumes), published 1830, to 1842; translated
into English 1853. The word Sociologie was first
coined in volume four (1839). Comte argued that
sociology would have two closely inter-related
parts, statics and dynamics. Statics would be
about social organisation and stability, dynamics
about change and history. Comte divided the
history of ideas into three stages: 1) theological
2) philosophical (critical) and 3) scientific
(positive).
- social Darwinism – lies in naturalization of the society,
this school recognizes natural selection and the struggle
for existence as the main determiners for the
development of the society (representatives: W. MacDugal);
- race-anthropologic school – recognizes race factor as
crucial for historic process, its representatives
Chamberlain, Hobino etc, were for the preservation of
pure race and they were against race mixing ;
geographic school – Bokl and Mechnikov
developed the psychological trend in sociology and the
terms “psychology of a people and a crowd”;
the theory of imitation – H.Tard introduced three
processes in the society: imitation, opposition,
adaptation and also two types of imitation: fashion and
customs.
the early period (the 19th century) – the first investigations of
the relations of public health, people psychic and physical state,
their diseases with social factors (Mac-Intire);
the period of formation (the beginning of 20th till World War I) –
the book “Medical sociology” by Blackwell in 1910;
the period of development (20-30 of the 20th century) - the
introduction of social analysis into medical researches – G.Stern
and his book “”Social factors of medical progress”;
the period of development as a science – after World War II
sociology of medicine became an independent science. The main
characteristics of this period: sociologic realization of the role and
place of medicine, health care system, patients in modern socialeconomic conditions and the necessity of sociologic education for
medical personnel;
the modern period – (since 1999 and up to now) the investigations
of the influence of the scientific technical progress on people’s
lifestyles, their behavior stereotypes, diseases and health.
-
Plan
Social structure
1.1
The definitions of social structure
1.2
The types of social structure
2.
Norms and their kinds
3.
Values
4.
Social groups and institutions
1.
The notion of social Social structure, used in a general sense,
refers to entities or groups in definite relation to each other, to
relatively enduring patterns of behaviour and relationship within
social systems, or to social institutions and norms becoming
embedded into social systems in such a way that they shape the
behaviour of actors within those social systems
the notion social structure as relationships between different
entities or groups or as enduring and relatively stable patterns of
relationship emphasises the idea that society is grouped into
structurally related groups or sets of roles, with different
functions, meanings or purposes. One example of social
structure is the idea of «social stratification» which refers to the
idea that society is separated into different strata, according to
social distinctions such as a race, class and gender. Social
treatment of persons within various social structures can be
understood as related to their placement within the various social
strata.
Definitions
and concepts of social
structure
As noted above, social structure has been identified
as
(i) the relationship of definite entities or groups to
each other,
(ii)
as enduring patterns of behaviour by
participants in a social system in relation to each
other, and
(iii)
as institutionalised norms or cognitive
frameworks that structure the actions of actors in
the social system.
Lopez and Scott distinguish between institutional
structure and relational structure, where in the
former:
. . . social structure is seen as comprising those
cultural or normative patterns that define the
expectations of agents hold about each other's
behaviour and that organize their enduring
relations with each other.
whereas in the latter:
. . . social structure is seen as comprising the
relationships themselves, understood as patterns
of causal interconnection and interdependence
among agents and their actions, as well as the
positions that they occupy.
The types of social
structure
normative structure — pattern of relations in given
structure (organisation) between norms and modes of
operations of people of varying social positions
ideal structure — pattern of relations between
beliefs and views of people of varying social positions
interest structure — pattern of relations between
goals and desires of people of varying social positions
interaction structure — forms of communications
of people of varying social positions
Norms
and their kinds
In sociology, a norm, or social norm, is
a rule that is socially enforced. Social
sanctioning is what distinguishes norms
from other cultural products or social
constructions such as values. Norms
and normlessness are thought to affect
a wide variety of human behaviour.
Folkways
A society's web of cultural rituals, traditions and routines. Deviation is
not usually considered a serious threat to social organization and is
thus sanctioned less severely than moral deviation. Example: In certain
households in the U.S., it is a folkway to say grace before eating
Thanksgiving dinner.
Moral
Moral judgements that define wrong and right behavior, the allowed
and the disallowed, what is wanted and not wanted within a culture.
The word is the plural of the Latin mor-, mos, which means 'custom'. A
violation of mores is usually considered by society as a threat to social
organization and harshly sanctioned. Examples: Drug use, sexual
promiscuity, and extreme styles of dress.
"More than ambition, more than ability, it is rules that limit contribution;
rules are the lowest common denominator of human behavior. They are
a substitute for rational thought". - G.Rickover
Laws
In highly organized societies, formalized and precisely delimited
norms. The breaking of legal norms, or laws, invokes
procedures and judgments through formal, legal institutions,
such as police and the courts, set up to enforce them. These
norms generally relate to individual violations of mores or to the
adjustment of proprietary relationships.
Heteronormativity
Heteronormativity is a system of norms dictating the range of
socially acceptable sexual and gender identities. It is based
around the notion that all people fall into two categories male
and female and that there are notions of how these two sexes
are expected to act.
Personal values
Personal values are implicitly related to choice; they guide
decisions by allowing for an individual's choices to be compared
to each choice's associated values.
Personal values developed early in life may be resistant to
change. They may be derived from those of particular groups or
systems, such as culture, religion and political party. However,
personal values are not universal; one's genes, family, nation
and historical environment determine one's personal values.
This is not to say that the value concepts themselves are not
universal, merely that each individual possess a unique
conception of them i.e. a personal knowledge of the appropriate
values for their own genes, feelings and experience.
Cultural values
Groups, societies, or cultures have values that are largely
shared by its members. Members share a culture even if each
member's personal values do not entirely agree with some
values sanctioned in the culture. This reflects an individual's
ability to synthesize and extract aspects valuable to them from
the multiple subcultures they belong to.
If an individual expresses a value that is in serious conflict with
their group's norms, the group's authority may carry out various
ways of stigmatizing or conforming the individual. For example,
imprisonment can result from conflict with social norms that
have been established as law.
In sociology, a group is usually defined as a
collection of humans or animals, who share certain
characteristics, interact with one another, accept
expectations and obligations as members of the
group, and share a common identity. Using this
definition, a society can appear as a large group.
While an comprises merely a number of individuals,
a group in sociology exhibits cohesiveness to a larger
degree. Characteristics that members in the group
may share include interests, values, ethnic/linguistic
background, and ties.
Social institution, is a group of social positions, connected by
social relations, performing a social role. It can be also defined
in a narrow sense as any institution in a society that works to
socialize the groups or people in it. Common examples include
universities, governments, families and any people or groups
that you have social interactions with. It is a major sphere of
social life organized to meet some human needs.
Social organizations can take many forms, depending on a
social context. For example, for family context the
corresponding social organization is of course the family. For
business context - an enterprise, company, corporation etc. For
educational context - schools, universities etc. For political
context - government, political parties and others. Commonly,
experts officially recognize these five major social institutions
that have been evident in some way in every civilization in
history: government, religion, economics, education and family.