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Crisis in Sociology
A01=Joseph Lopreato
A01=Timothy Crippen
academic discipline survival
Animal Kingdom
Author_Joseph Lopreato
Author_Timothy Crippen
behavioral science integration
Biological Science
Category=JHBA
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Common Language
Darwin's Finches
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Davis Moore Theory
Differential Parental Investment
Dominance Orders
empirical hypothesis testing
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eq_isMigrated=1
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Evolutionary Behavioral Science
evolutionary psychology application
evolutionary theory in social research
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Human Sociobiology
Inclusive Fitness
Kin Selection
Male Male Competition
Modern Evolutionary Theory
Modern Synthesis
Nepotistic Favoritism
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Punctuated Equilibrium Theory
Relative Parental Investment
Restitutive Sanctions
sex differences research
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social science methodology
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Standard Social Science Model
Timothy Crippen
War Ii
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Product details
- ISBN 9780765808745
- Weight: 430g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 30 Sep 2001
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
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Crisis in Sociology presents a compelling portrait of sociology's current troubles and proposes a controversial remedy. In the authors' view, sociology's crisis has deep roots, traceable to the over-ambitious sweep of the discipline's founders. Generations of sociologists have failed to focus effectively on the tasks necessary to build a social science. The authors see sociology's most disabling flaw in the failure to discover even a single general law or principle. This makes it impossible to systematically organize empirical observations, guide inquiry by suggesting falsifiable hypotheses, or form the core of a genuinely cumulative body of knowledge. Absent such a theoretical tool, sociology can aspire to little more than an amorphous mass of hunches and disconnected facts. The condition engenders confusion and unproductive debate. It invites fragmentation and predation by applied social disciplines, such as business administration, criminal justice, social work, and urban studies. Even more dangerous are incursions by prestigious social sciences and by branches of evolutionary biology that constitute the frontier of the current revolution in behavioral science. Lopreato and Crippen argue that unless sociology takes into account central developments in evolutionary science, it will not survive as an academic discipline. Crisis in Sociology argues that participation in the "new social science," exemplified by thriving new fields such as evolutionary psychology, will help to build a vigorous, scientific sociology. The authors analyze research on such subjects as sex roles, social stratification, and ethnic conflict, showing how otherwise disconnected features of the sociological landscape can in fact contribute to a theoretically coherent and cumulative body of knowledge.
Joseph Lopreato, Timothy Crippen
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