Introduction (ASE 4e)

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Across
  1. 5. The rapid development in the late 1700s and throughout the 1800s of manufacturing and industry, enabled by technological changes in machinery and power sources.
  2. 8. When many people suddenly buy unusually large amounts of food and other necessities, usually out of fear of a weather event, natural disaster, or disease.
  3. 9. The ability to do work.
  4. 10. Social forces that impact individual behavior and are produced by that behavior.
  5. 12. An ongoing struggle between opposites.
  6. 15. Perspective in which we think about our own personal experience in relation to a larger set of social forces that influence every aspect of our lives.
  7. 16. Feeling of being disconnected from others, from work, and even from one’s own sense of humanity.
  8. 18. Patterns of connections between people in a society
  9. 19. The struggle between groups that have different interests and needs.
  10. 20. Present in simple societies, where everyone is connected and the society is highly cohesive
  11. 23. Perspective that focuses on the meaning that people make of their actions.
Down
  1. 1. Sociological perspective that sees individuals as defined by their relationships to others and to institutions such as the economy.
  2. 2. How tied you are to others in your community.
  3. 3. Expectations for behavior.
  4. 4. Perspective that individuals should be at the center of any study of society.
  5. 6. Present in complex societies, where many members are not connected to each other personally but depend on others due to the division of labor.
  6. 7. How goods and resources are owned and distributed.
  7. 11. A society’s use of rules to monitor members’ actions
  8. 13. Behaviors that produce social structures.
  9. 14. A lack of morals or social expectations to guide behavior.
  10. 17. According to Weber, the values people hold that guide their behavior.
  11. 18. The study of how societies are organized and how the organization of a society influences the behavior of people living in it. Sociology overlaps with other disciplines, such as political science, psychology, and economics.
  12. 21. A group of people with similar positions in the economy and similar needs and interests (for example, workers).
  13. 22. Compensation for one’s labor.
  14. 24. Economic arrangement in which workers, and even entire communities, specialize in particular tasks or products, rather than producing everything they need themselves.