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Towards a Biosocial Science is a critical introduction to the history and conceptual concerns of sociology that incorporates the immense and revolutionary contributions evolutionary biology, behavioral genetics, and neuroscience are making to the study of human behavior and social organization.
Towards a Biosocial Science is a critical introduction to the history and conceptual concerns of sociology that incorporates the immense and revolutionary contributions evolutionary biology, behavioral genetics, and neuroscience are making to the study of human behavior and social organization.
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Autorenporträt
Alexander Riley, Professor of Sociology at Bucknell University, USA, has read and written extensively in social theory and the history of the social sciences over the past 20 years. His work on the nature and legacy of the Durkheimian tradition is internationally recognized. Riley is the author of several previous books, including Angel Patriots: The Crash of United Flight 93 and the Myth of America, and Godless Intellectuals? The Intellectual Pursuit of the Sacred Reinvented.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface: The Dismal Science of Human Nature Part 1. The Problem with Sociology and its Solution 1. What's Wrong with Sociology? 2. The Basics for an Evolutionary Sociology 3. Why and How are Humans Social? 4. Morality in a Biosocial Context Part 2. Basic Categories of Human Differentiation 5. The Sex Difference in Homo sapiens 6. Stratification, Status, and Inequality in Homo sapiens 7. Racial Identity and Difference in Homo sapiens 8. Culture in Homo sapiens Epilogue: The Evolutionary End of Sociology?
Preface: The Dismal Science of Human Nature
Part 1. The Problem with Sociology and its Solution
1. What's Wrong with Sociology?
2. The Basics for an Evolutionary Sociology
3. Why and How are Humans Social?
4. Morality in a Biosocial Context
Part 2. Basic Categories of Human Differentiation
5. The Sex Difference in Homo sapiens
6. Stratification, Status, and Inequality in Homo sapiens
Preface: The Dismal Science of Human Nature Part 1. The Problem with Sociology and its Solution 1. What's Wrong with Sociology? 2. The Basics for an Evolutionary Sociology 3. Why and How are Humans Social? 4. Morality in a Biosocial Context Part 2. Basic Categories of Human Differentiation 5. The Sex Difference in Homo sapiens 6. Stratification, Status, and Inequality in Homo sapiens 7. Racial Identity and Difference in Homo sapiens 8. Culture in Homo sapiens Epilogue: The Evolutionary End of Sociology?
Preface: The Dismal Science of Human Nature
Part 1. The Problem with Sociology and its Solution
1. What's Wrong with Sociology?
2. The Basics for an Evolutionary Sociology
3. Why and How are Humans Social?
4. Morality in a Biosocial Context
Part 2. Basic Categories of Human Differentiation
5. The Sex Difference in Homo sapiens
6. Stratification, Status, and Inequality in Homo sapiens
7. Racial Identity and Difference in Homo sapiens
8. Culture in Homo sapiens
Epilogue: The Evolutionary End of Sociology?
Rezensionen
"Although evolutionary thinking in sociology predated Darwin, Alexander Riley observes that it has been only very recently that sociologists have begun to reclaim their legacy as evolutionary scientists. Providing an excellent overview of developments in evolutionary biology that began in the mid-1960s, Riley traces the recent development of what is now becoming known as 'evolutionary sociology.' Riley provides an introduction to this exciting scientific and scholarly project that will be both accessible to readers unfamiliar with the pertinent technical literature as well as stimulating and thought-provoking to sociologists who are already actively engaged in the 'second Darwinian Revolution.' Insisting that sociological analysis must be guided by the discipline of reason and evidence, Riley encourages his peer sociologists not to allow ideological and political commitments to compromise their efforts to conduct dispassionate scientific analyses. Only then can they pursue their craft in a manner that will contribute to the development of a twenty-first century social science that can fulfill the explanatory promise envisioned by its founders."
Richard Machalek, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Wyoming
"Toward a Biosocial Science is an extraordinary book, entertaining, erudite, courageous, and a potential lifeline for sociology."
Edward O. Wilson, University Professor Emeritus, Harvard University