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Definition of Structural sociology
1. Noun. A sociological theory based on the premise that society comes before individuals.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Structural Sociology
Literary usage of Structural sociology
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to Sociology by Arthur Morrow Lewis (1912)
"<$ SPENCER'S structural sociology difference between a department store and an
economic system. It is the difference between an exhibit of a collection of ..."
2. General Sociology: An Exposition of the Main Development in Sociological by Albion Woodbury Small (1905)
"Again, he says: "We have, in short, materials for a structural sociology — a
descriptive social anatomy" (Inductive Sociology ..."
3. General Sociology: An Exposition of the Main Development in Sociological by Albion Woodbury Small (1905)
"Again, he says: "We have, in short, materials for a structural sociology — a
descriptive social anatomy " (Inductive Sociology, p. 29). ..."
4. Inductive Sociology: A Syllabus of Methods, Analyses and Classifications by Franklin Henry Giddings (1901)
"We have, in short, materials for a structural sociology — a descriptive Social
Anatomy. But we have not, as yet, an abundance of sufficiently accurate ..."
5. Outlines of Sociology by Frank Wilson Blackmar, John Lewis Gillin (1915)
"... in 1874, began to publish his monumental work on structural sociology, called
The Structure and Life of the Social Body (Bau und Leben des Socialen ..."
6. Outlines of Sociology by Frank Wilson Blackmar, John Lewis Gillin (1921)
"... in 1874, began to publish his monumental work on structural sociology, called
The Structure and Life of the Social Body (Bau und Leben des Sodden ..."