- •Лазарева о.П., Хвесько т.В., Шулинин и.Н.
- •Предисловие
- •Contents
- •Immanuel Kant
- •Reading and speaking
- •Sociology as a science
- •Reading and translation
- •1. Read the text about one of the most famous European thinkers and answer the following questions:
- •Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- •G eorg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was a German philosopher, and with Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, one of the creators of German Idealism.
- •2. Name people mentioned in the text in Russian.
- •3. Translate words and phrases:
- •4. Add some more philosophical terms from the text.
- •5 Translate the text about Hegel into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •G. W. F. Hegel
- •Speaking Sphere of scientific research
- •Vocabulary to use
- •Grammar notes
- •Other social sciences include political science, economics and anthropology, including physical anthropology, and cultural or social anthropology.
- •Weber's dissertation as well as his post-doctoral work were in legal history.
- •Reading and speaking
- •What is a society
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about one of the most influential European thinkers and answer the following questions:
- •Immanuel Kant
- •Give Russian equivalents to the proper names:
- •Translate the following words and phrases:
- •Translate the text about Immanuel Kant into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •Kant's philosophy
- •Grammar notes
- •Reading and speaking
- •Max Weber
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about one of the most influential European thinkers and answer the following questions:
- •Max Weber
- •Reading and summarizing
- •Max Weber The Ideal Type
- •Speaking Historical background of research problem
- •Vocabulary to use
- •Grammar notes
- •Reading and speaking
- •New paradigm of social organization
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about a French sociologist and answer the following questions:
- •Émile Durkheim
- •Render Durkheim’s ideas into Russian:
- •Translate the following words and phrases:
- •Translate the text about Emile Durkheim into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •Durkheim The Sociology of Knowledge
- •Grammar notes Reported speech Sequence of tenses
- •Reading and speaking
- •Sociological theory and empirical research
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about a German sociologist and answer the following questions:
- •Ferdinand Tönnies
- •Find Russian equivalents to the following German words, mind their pronunciation in German:
- •Translate the proper names from the text:
- •Translate the following words and phrases:
- •Translate the text about Ferdinand Toennies into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •Ferdinand tonnies The People (Volkstum) and the State (Staatstum)
- •Speaking Results and conclusion of the current research
- •Vocabulary to use
- •Grammar notes
- •Infinitive and Gerund
- •Infinitive
- •Reading and speaking
- •General sociological orientations
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about Karl Marx and answer the following questions:
- •Karl Marx
- •Translate the names of Karl Marx’s works:
- •Translate the following words and phrases:
- •Translate the text about Karl Marx into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •Das Kapital From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Grammar notes Participle
- •Reading and speaking
- •Empirical generalizations in sociology
- •Reading and translation
- •Read the text about young years of Pitirim Sorokin and answer the following questions:
- •Pitirim a. Sorokin
- •Translate the following proper names:
- •Translate the following words and phrases:
- •Translate the text about Pitirim Sorokin into Russian. Reading and summarizing
- •Pitirim Sorokin Conception of Social Mobility and Its Forms
- •Grammar notes
- •Reading and speaking
- •British sociology
- •Reading and translation
- •Vilfredo Pareto
- •Reading and summarizing
- •Vilfredo Pareto
- •Mind & Society
- •Grammar notes
- •Reading and speaking
- •Globalization
- •Reading and translation
- •Talcott Parsons
- •Reading and summarizing
- •Talcott Parsons
- •The Structure of Social Action
- •Introductory the problem
- •Writing research papers
- •Gathering data, writing summary notes and organizing ideas
- •List of phrases used in writing
- •Grammar notes
- •Reading and speaking
- •Cross-cultural analysis
- •Reading and translation
- •Robert King Merton
- •Reading and summarizing
- •Writing research papers Structure, Linguistics and Style
- •Grammar notes Revision
- •Sources
- •Literature
Reading and speaking
Pre-reading task
Agree or disagree with the statement: “A person can live only in the society of other people”.
What is “a society” for you?
Do you think that a society should be seen as an entity?
Read the text.
What is a society
This question has to be asked and answered at the outset. Until we have decided whether or not to regard a society as an entity; and until we have decided whether, if regarded as an entity, a society is to be classed as absolutely unlike all other entities or as like some others; our conception of the subject matter before us remains vague. It may be said that a society is but a collective name for a number of individuals. Carrying the controversy between nominalism and realism into another sphere, a nominalist might affirm that just as there exist only the members of a species, while the species considered apart from them has no existence; so the units of a society alone exist, while the existence of the society is but verbal. Instancing a lecturer's audience as an aggregate which by disappearing at the close of the lecture, proves itself to be not a thing but only a certain arrangement of persons, he night argue that the like holds of the citizens forming a nation.
But without disputing the other steps of his argument, the last step may be denied. The arrangement, temporary in the one case, is lasting in the other; and it is the permanence of the relations among component parts which constitutes the individuality of a whole as distinguished from the individualities of its parts. A coherent mass broken into fragments ceases to be a thing; while, conversely, the stones, bricks, and wood, previously separate, become the thing called a house if connected in fixed ways. Thus we consistently regard a society as an entity, because, though formed of discrete units, a certain concreteness in the aggregate of them is implied by the maintenance, for generations and centuries, of a general likeness of arrangement throughout the area occupied. And it is this trait which yields our idea of a society. For, withholding the name from an ever-changing cluster such as primitive men form, we apply it only where some constancy in the distribution of parts has resulted from settled life.
Regarding a society as a thing, what kind of thing must we call it? It seems totally unlike every object with which our senses acquaint us. Any likeness it may possibly have to other objects, cannot be manifest to perception, but can be discerned only by reason. If the constant relations among its parts make it an entity; the question arises whether these constant relations among its parts are akin to the constant relations among the parts of other entities. Between a society and anything else, the only conceivable resemblance must be one due to parallelism of principle in the arrangement of components. There are two great classes of aggregates with which the social aggregate may be compared-the inorganic and the organic. Are the attributes of a society, considered apart from its living units, in any way like those of a not-living body? or are they in any way like those of a living body? or are they entirely unlike those of both?
The first of these questions needs only to be asked to be answered in the negative. A whole of which the parts are alive, cannot, in its general characters, be like lifeless wholes. The second question, not to be thus promptly answered, is to be answered in the affirmative. The reasons for asserting that the permanent relations among the parts of a society, are analogous to the permanent relations among the parts of a living body, we have now to consider.
Answer the following questions
What is a society?
What example does the author of the text give to show a society as an entity?
What is the only resemblance between a society and other entities?
Is a society like a living or not-living body or both?
Peter Burger, the author of one of the most popular textbooks of sociology in the world, considers a society as “a net of social roles”. Agree or disagree.
