Question: You are a professor of Sociology. What is sociology?
Answer: To put it briefly, sociology is the scientific study of human behavior in society. For sociologists, all human behavior occurs in a social context. It is social context, composed of culture and all social institutions, that shapes what we do and think. Living in society, we human beings are dependent on one another for our very existence, influencing and being influenced by one another. What kind of people we are is not decided by ourselves but by other people. Likewise, the way we look at the world is the result of our exposure to other human beings. Sociologists use a variety of methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis to help us understand how we influence and are influenced by other people in society. In a word, sociology is about people. If you are interested in watching people and how they interact, sociology is probably the right subject for you, either as a student or just as a curious observer.
Sociology is both interesting and challenging because the subject of it is the social world, which is enormous and extremely complex. Sociological questions are many and various; and anyone, such as your grandma or your next door neighbor who know nothing about atoms or molecules may have lots of questions or opinions about society. This is also a reason why sociology is a controversial subject. Different people may have totally different opinions. For a sociologist, one challenge is to set aside his or her own biases and preconceptions about how society “should” work. His or her task is to discover and explain how society functions.
Most sociologists work in academia, teaching sociology and conduct sociological research. Oftentimes, their findings are used by policy makers, law enforcement agencies, and others. Some sociologists work for government agencies, think tanks, nonprofit organizations, or private corporations. They also publish research reports which can impact policies or rally public support for a particular cause. Students who major in sociology may find themselves employed in a variety of fields after graduation. They may work as law enforcement officers, social workers, high school teachers and educational administrators, journalists, business consultants, and so on.
It should be pointed out that society is different from sociology. Society is what sociologists study; sociology is the study of society. Some people make the mistake of using social when they should have used sociological. Whether crime rates in your community go up or down, it is s social problem. But if you try to find out how they go up or down, you are trying to solve a sociological problem.
Question: How do you look at everything from a sociological perspective?
Answer: To understand the very complicated social world, sociologists have developed some useful perspectives. A perspective is a way of looking at and seeing (or interpreting) something. To have a perspective, therefore, is to look at something in a particular way. When we talk about the sociological perspective, we are referring to the particular way in which sociologists, as opposed to non-sociologists, try to understand human social behavior. This, of course, does not mean that all sociologists will look at the world from exactly the same viewpoint. Neither does it mean that there is only one perspective. It only means that all sociologists have received special training and see what ordinary people usually do not see.
How do you develop the sociological perspective? It begins with as simple a thing as watching people and wondering about how society influences people’s lives. You start your sociological work by curiously observing people and their behavior. Then, you convert this curiosity into the systematic study of how society influences different people’s experience within it. Once this is done, you have developed the sociological perspective.
The sociological perspective was perhaps best explained by C. Wright Mills (1916-1962), one of the most famous American sociologists. In his classic book, The Sociological Imagination (1959), he writes: “The sociological imagination (or perspective) enables us to grasp the connection between history and biography.” Here, history refers to society’s historical background, how it came to be and how it is changing. Biography refers to the individual’s specific experiences within this broad background. In other words, the sociological imagination gives us the ability to look beyond our personality and local environment to a wider social structure. It allows us to see how our personal experiences influence and are influenced by existing social arrangements. Sociology enables us to understand the general by abstracting from the specific.
To Further explain the sociological imagination (or perspective), Mills points out the distinction between “troubles” and “issues.” Troubles, according to him, are privately felt problems which stem from one individual’s personal life. Issues, on the other hand, affect large numbers of people because they originate from the institutional arrangements and history of a society. To illustrate this point, Mills provides an example. If one person is out of work, this could be seen as his or her “personal trouble.” Any effort to help with the trouble would focus on the individual. If, however, a million or more people are out of work, that is a “social problem (social issue)” which requires a social solution. In this way, the sociological perspective helps sociologists see the link between troubles and issues.
The sociological perspective is similarly explained by another American sociologist, Peter Burger (1963), who described it as seeing the general in the particular. It means that sociologists identify general patterns by looking at the behavior of particular people. This is possible because society influences all its members even though each individual is unique.
Question: You also teach Philosopohy. What is philosophy all about?
Asnwer: Maybe you are a college student and you have just registered for a course in philosophy. Or you are someone with an interest in philosophy and want to read some books about it. Maybe you already know what the word “philosophy” means in daily use. You may have heard your English professor say to the class, “My teaching philosophy is: the more you write the better writer you will be.” Used in this sense, the word philosophy is synonymous to outlook, or general viewpoint. Or you may have heard a fellow worker say to you, “I didn’t get the bonus, but I’m philosophical about it.” Here, to be philosophical simply means to have a calm and passive attitude towards disappointments or difficulties. In general, if you are philosophical about life, you take life as it is, accepting things without worrying about them.
But your philosophy professor or a philosophy book will not teach you how to take a passive attitude towards your life or how not to worry about things. The professor or the writer will start with explaining to you that the word “philosophy” is actually a combination of two Greek words “Philos” (love) and “Sophia” (wisdom), literally meaning “the love of wisdom.” But what exactly is wisdom, you may ask? For ancient Greek thinkers such as Socrates, wisdom referred to the knowledge of fundamental principles and laws. It was something that was basic and unchanging, as opposed to those things that were only transitory and ever changing. To put it another way, for the ancient Greek philosophers, philosophy was knowledge of things as they really were, not as they appeared to be. It is thus very important to know that you can only get the true Knowledge of things when you don’t take your life for granted. You can’t take a passive attitude towards life when you study philosophy.
For a long time since the Ancient Greek times, philosophy in the West was considered as the mother of all knowledge. The study of philosophy created most of the academic fields of research that we are still doing today. The highest degrees we can obtain are Ph.D.’s, that is, philosophy doctorates. Both in the West and East, philosophers have tried to ask and answer all kinds of questions about life. They have tried to get at the basis of things, not the superficial, trivial details, but the underlying fundamentals. In your philosophy class, for example, your professor will not talk about the differences between oil painting and water color because that’s the job for a different class. Instead, your philosophy professor will focus on discussing what art is in general. In a philosophy class, you will learn fundamental principles in different fields by touching upon many branches of philosophy: What is reality (Metaphysics)? How do we know anything (Epistemology)? What do we ought to do (Ethics)? What is the nature of correct reasoning (Logic)? What is art (Esthetics)? etc.
Unlike a science, such as physics or biology, which is done through observation and experiment, philosophy is not concerned with the structure or behavior of physical and natural world. Neither is philosophy entirely an art, such as painting or music, which is done through creation. Philosophy is about obtaining wisdom, which suggests a sense of objective knowledge. We do philosophy in a unique way, a mixture of observation, thinking, and reasoning. During its long history, philosophers have put forward various theories that explain many general and fundamental principles of human world. These principles are not the same as those found in nature. They are the ones that shape and guide human behavior. When you study philosophy, you are taught and trained to think systematically and rationally about many questions. The ultimate goal is to learn how these fundamental questions relate to all human activities. Indeed, your philosophy professor will tell you that you have a lot of thinking to do in this class, far more than you have probably expected. This little philosophy book tells you the same thing.