Learning The Basics Of Sociology

1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526
Across
  1. 4. A feature of Society
  2. 9. Focus on forces in society that promote competition and change
  3. 10. Allows you to see beyond your own day-to-day life by viewing the world through others' eyes
  4. 11. Study of how the environment affects an individuals behavior and personality
  5. 15. View society of as a set of interrelated parts that work together to produce a stable social system
  6. 16. Focus on how people use symbols when interacting
  7. 20. An explanation of the relationships among particular phenomena
  8. 23. Unintended and Unrecognized consequence of an element of society
  9. 24. The disciplines that study human social behavior or institutions and functions of human society in a scientific manner
  10. 25. The capacity to range from the most impersonal and remote topics to the most intimate features of the human self
  11. 26. An attempt to understand the meanings individuals attach to their actions
Down
  1. 1. The negative consequence an element has for the stability of the social system
  2. 2. The social science that studies human society and social behavior
  3. 3. Social sciences that deal with the behavior and thinking of organisms
  4. 5. "School of thought" General set of assumptions about the nature of things
  5. 6. The comparative study of past and present cultures
  6. 7. Anything that represents something else
  7. 8. Focus on how individuals interact with one another in society
  8. 12. The study of past events
  9. 13. Intended and Recognized consequence of an element of society
  10. 14. Consequence that an element of society produces for the maintenance of its social system
  11. 17. The study of choices people make in an effort to satisfy their needs and wants
  12. 18. Study of the organization and operation of government
  13. 19. Observable facts or events that involve human society
  14. 21. How people relate to one another and influence each other's behavior
  15. 22. he theory that individuals, groups, and peoples are subject to the same laws of natural selection as plants and animals