📘 Chapter 1: Sociology and Society


1. Origin of Sociology

  • Sociology emerged in Europe in the 19th century.

  • Influenced by major historical changes:

    • French Revolution (1789): Challenged monarchy, church, and feudalism → introduced democracy and equality.

    • Industrial Revolution (18th–19th century): Urbanisation, factories, capitalism, class conflict.

  • Early sociologists studied these transformations.

Important thinkers:

  • Auguste Comte (1798–1857): “Father of Sociology”; coined the term Sociology.

  • Emile Durkheim: Studied division of labour, suicide, religion.

  • Karl Marx: Studied class struggle and capitalism.

  • Max Weber: Focused on social action, authority, religion.


2. Definition of Sociology

  • Sociology is the systematic and scientific study of society, human groups, and social interactions.

  • According to Comte: Sociology is the science of society.


3. Difference Between Sociology and Common Sense

  • Common Sense:

    • Based on everyday knowledge/experience.

    • Often untested and biased.

  • Sociology:

    • Based on systematic study, observation, evidence.

    • Objective and verifiable.


4. Nature/Features of Sociology

  1. Scientific discipline.

  2. Studies human behaviour in groups.

  3. Concerned with institutions (family, marriage, economy, politics).

  4. Interdisciplinary – connected with economics, political science, anthropology, psychology, and history.

  5. Helps understand social issues and promotes social change.


5. Importance of Sociology

  • Helps to understand social institutions.

  • Creates awareness about inequality, caste, gender, poverty.

  • Builds critical thinking against prejudices and stereotypes.

  • Provides tools for planning and policy-making.

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