How To Be A Sociologist
Culture
- Spirituality, Superstition, and Legends
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The common utility of a pattern of thought
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Related: The reproduction of such myths
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Wow so interesting:
- (current) Mind Control Manipulation of Mainstream Music - Mark Devlin
- (current) Quartz crystal
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_superstitions
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gotta be careful about going native into crazy thought processes! but this seems like a good direction
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Self-other. Empathy
- Knowing others, and what others know of you
- How much do individuals really know the internal states of each others' minds?
- How does this understanding develop (i.e. what modulates the extent of understanding?)
Motivation
I need to compile a list of interesting sociological phenomena.
Otherwise I won't have anything to explain.
I really want to be able to understand and explain the quite strange social world.
And the best part of a good sociological analysis is the examples.
I also want to understand what sociologists can explain, and what they're confused about.
This requires a deep understanding of the dominant and functioning sociological theories.
What do researchers mobilize to explain things? Maybe I could start a dictionary of these theories.
Are extremes interesting?
I think many sociologists would say the everyday interactions we engage in are interesting.
It's a typical rhetorical move at least.
What's the ideal format?
This question is really, "what am I interested in"?
I'm interested in the interactions of human beings, but why?
I think I have to first understand why I'm interested to understand which interactions I'm most interested in.
Methodology ideas
- Watch documentaries about people.
- A choice problem. Which documentaries to watch?
- Read ethnographies
- Understand what is already known within academia about people.
- Brainstorm first, to identify which social situations should be interesting
- Inherent bias
- Others may not have thought of these, though
- Take a random sample!
- Geographically
- generate a random lat/lon and learn as much as you can about the individuals close
- weighted random sample by population
- Hierarchically by population
- weighted random sample, by group size
- Geographically
- Explore different contexts
- Small group
- Crowd dynamics
- Chat rooms / online
- Historical accounts / retrospectives
- Autobiographies
- Personal life, the real world
- Find another individual who has compiled such stories
- Topical
- Start with a sociological topic of interest