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Reviews for Sociology Hesitant Thinking With W. E. B. Dubois

 Sociology Hesitant Thinking With W. E. B. Dubois magazine reviews

The average rating for Sociology Hesitant Thinking With W. E. B. Dubois based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-07-09 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Paul Clifford
Johns Hopkins Symptoms & Remedies @ 1995, ISBN: 0929661192, HB, LBS, 1/2015
Review # 2 was written on 2021-01-31 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Jonathan Avedovech
So, what is sociology? You would think that a bibliophile who’s decided to commit his life to the discipline would be able to muster a somewhat satisfactory answer, but the truth is I’ve demurred to such enquiries on more than a few occasions, not out of an proclivity for coquetry, but simply out of embarrassed ignorance. Did I have more to offer than a non-too-helpful answer of “we study people; we study societies”? (I probably do, but then I’ll ramble on for 2 minutes and lose my interlocutor: so I do have a response, just not the Christmas stocking version of it.) Sociologists study people; we study society. We’re committed to a certain sort of holism: the idea that society, social institutions, social interaction — whatever ‘social’ object of enquiry we choose to obsess over — individuals engage with and in cannot be duly understood without paying attention to the group. By corollary, we as a group believe that purely atomistic visions of human behavior miss something essential — humans are too interconnected, interdependent, social groups too closely integrated, for that to be possibles (shoot the exceptions at me). As that bromide from the old Masters goes: “No Man is an Island.”


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