Comprehensive Social Sciences & Theoretical Perspectives Overview

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93 Terms

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Social Sciences

Scientific study of society: how people behave, interact and influence institutions, economies, culture and politics.

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Anthropology

Study of ancient societies, culture, traditions, language, values, technology, cultural change.

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Herodotus

Father of History, early ethnographic accounts; mentioned as a precursor to anthropology.

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Demography

Study of human population size & characteristics (age, sex, marital status, religion, nationality) and factors affecting population change.

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Economics

Allocation of scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants; from Greek oikos (home) + nomos (management).

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Adam Smith

Scottish economist; Wealth of Nations; division of labour, invisible hand; mentioned as founder of modern economics.

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Thomas Malthus

English scholar; Essay on the Principle of Population; warned of overpopulation; mentioned for demographic-economics link.

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David Ricardo

British economist; Principles of Political Economy and Taxation; theory of comparative advantage; mentioned to show classical economics.

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Geography

Interaction between environment and people; spatial variation (where/why things are located).

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Eratosthenes

Greek scholar; coined 'geography,' measured Earth's circumference; mentioned as 'Father of Geography.'

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Strabo

Greek geographer; wrote Geographika; mentioned for early geographic thought.

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History

Systematic study of the past using sources and critique.

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Thucydides

Greek historian; History of the Peloponnesian War; mentioned for rigorous evidence use.

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Linguistics

Study of language, grammar, and acquisition.

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Friedrich von Schlegel, Franz Bopp, Rasmus Rask

Pioneers of comparative linguistics; mentioned for Proto-Indo-European studies.

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Ferdinand de Saussure

Swiss linguist; Cours de Linguistique Générale; structuralism; mentioned as founder of modern linguistics.

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Political Science

Study of politics, power, government, institutions.

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Aristotle

Greek philosopher; Politics; 'man is by nature a political animal'; mentioned as founder of political science.

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John Locke

English philosopher; Two Treatises on Government; social contract, natural rights; mentioned as liberal influence.

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John Stuart Mill

English philosopher; On Liberty; Considerations on Representative Government; mentioned for liberal democratic thought.

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Psychology

Scientific study of behavior & mental processes.

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Wilhelm Wundt

German psychologist; first psychology lab; structuralism; mentioned as father of psychology.

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William James

American philosopher; functionalism; mentioned for adapting psychology to environment.

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Sigmund Freud

Austrian neurologist; unconscious and psychoanalysis; mentioned for depth psychology.

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Sociology

Study of social relationships, norms, institutions.

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Auguste Comte

French philosopher; coined 'sociology'; positivism. Mentioned as founder of sociology.

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Structural-Functionalism

Society as a system of interdependent parts; institutions maintain stability and equilibrium.

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Émile Durkheim

Division of Labour in Society, Suicide; showed how social facts maintain order.

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Herbert Spencer

Organic analogy of society; 'survival of the fittest.'

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Robert K. Merton

Manifest vs latent functions; dysfunctions.

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Marxism / Conflict Perspective

Society characterized by inequality and conflict over scarce resources; class struggle drives change.

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Karl Marx

Historical materialism; critique of capitalism.

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Friedrich Engels

Co-authored Communist Manifesto; working-class conditions.

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Symbolic Interactionism

Human behavior shaped by meanings created through symbolic interaction; reality constructed in everyday life.

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Symbolic Interactionism Level

Micro

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George Herbert Mead

Social self; role-taking.

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Herbert Blumer

Coined term; three premises.

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Charles Horton Cooley

Looking-glass self.

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Erving Goffman

Dramaturgical model; front/back stage.

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Psychoanalysis

Theory of mind and therapy; behavior driven by unconscious conflicts and childhood experiences.

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Id

Instinctual drives.

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Superego

Moral conscience; produces pride or guilt.

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Ego

Mediator; reality principle.

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Defense mechanisms

Psychological strategies used to cope with reality and maintain self-image.

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Repression

Burying a painful feeling or thought from your awareness though it may resurface in symbolic form. Sometimes considered a basis of other defense mechanisms

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Denial

Insisting addiction doesn't exist.

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Regression

Reverting to an older, less mature way of handling stresses and feelings

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Projection

Attributing your own unacceptable thoughts or feelings to someone or something else

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Splitting

Everything in the world is seen as all good or all bad with nothing in between

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Isolation of affect

Attempting to avoid a painful thought or feeling by objectifying and emotionally detaching oneself from the feeling

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Displacement

Channeling a feeling or thought from its actual source to something or someone else

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Reaction formation

Adopting beliefs, attitudes, and feelings contrary to what you really believe

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Rationalization

Justifying one's behaviors and motivations by substituting good, acceptable reasons for these real motivations

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Altruism

Handling your own pain by helping others

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Sublimation

Redirecting unacceptable, instinctual drives into personally and socially acceptable channels.

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Suppression

The effort to hide and control unacceptable thoughts or feelings.

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Rational Choice Theory

Individuals act rationally to maximize utility given preferences, beliefs, and constraints.

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Rational Choice Theory Assumptions

Completeness, Transitivity, Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives.

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Decision patterns in Rational Choice Theory

Four logical paths: Desire → Belief → Action.

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Direct Action

Acting immediately on desire.

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Thomas Hobbes

Author of Leviathan; known for the concept of social contract and choice from desires.

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George Homans

Developed social exchange theory.

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Gary Becker

Extended economics to family, crime, and discrimination.

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Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps)

A conditional cash transfer program that improves health, education, and nutrition.

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Institutionalism

The theory that institutions shape behavior, including both formal (laws, constitutions) and informal (customs, NGOs, community groups) aspects.

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Thorstein Veblen

Known for the concept of conspicuous consumption.

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John R. Commons

Defined institutions as working rules.

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Karl Polanyi

Argued that economies are embedded in society.

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Carl J. Friedrich

Known for his work on constitutionalism.

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Chester Barnard

Described organizations as cooperative systems.

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James March & Johan Olsen

Pioneers of New Institutionalism.

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Normative Institutionalism

The subfield that studies how institutions shape behavior through values and rules.

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Rational Choice Institutionalism

Focuses on how actors maximize preferences within institutional constraints.

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Historical Institutionalism

Examines how past choices shape present and future actions, known as path dependence.

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Feminist Institutionalism

Studies how institutions reinforce gendered power relations.

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Sociological Institutionalism

Explains institutional persistence through culture and norms.

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Feminism

A movement and theory advocating for political, economic, and social equality of the sexes.

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First Wave Feminism

Focused on women's suffrage, access to education, labor rights, and property rights.

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Second Wave Feminism

Broadened the struggle to reproductive rights, workplace equality, family roles, and challenging legal and cultural inequalities.

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Third Wave Feminism

Emphasizes diversity and intersectionality, critiquing universal notions of womanhood.

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Liberal Feminism

Calls for equal opportunities in education, jobs, and politics.

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Socialist Feminism

Highlights the intersection of gender and class oppression, stressing intersectionality of race, age, and religion.

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Radical Feminism

Sees patriarchy as the root of oppression and advocates for dismantling male-dominated structures.

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Marxist Feminism

Links women's oppression to capitalism and economic exploitation.

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Postmodern Feminism

Critiques grand narratives and emphasizes plurality and fluidity of identity.

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Gender ideology

Reinforces traditional male/female roles, legitimizes inequality, and stigmatizes those who deviate from norms.

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Examples of Gender Ideology

Wage gap between men and women; women criticized for working instead of being housewives; men stigmatized for taking caregiving roles.

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Completeness

All actions can be ranked in a complete partial ordering of preference (indifference between two [2] or more is possible). In other words, all pairs of actions can be compared with each other.

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Transitivity

If action A is preferred to B, and action B is preferred to C, then A is preferred to C. If A is preferred to B out of the choice set {A,

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iIndependence of Irrelevant Alternatives

B}, then introducing a third alternative X, thus expanding the choice set {A, B, X}, must leave A preferred to B.

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Strict Preference

It occurs when an individual prefers A to B and does not view them as equally preferred.

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Weak Preference

It can be held in which an individual either strictly prefers A over B or is indifferent between them.

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Indifferent Preference

It occurs when an individual neither prefers A to B nor B to A. Since the individual does not refuse a comparison, they must, therefore, not be included in the options.