Sociologists
in sentence
42 examples of Sociologists in a sentence
Many
sociologists
like Veblen and Wolfe would argue that the reason why we take origins so seriously is because we're snobs, because we're focused on status.
Now, I don't want to upset the
sociologists
here, so I absolutely cannot talk about the individual motivations for a rioter, but when you look at the rioters all together, mathematically, you can separate it into a three-stage process and draw analogies accordingly.
So, I specialize in twentysomethings because I believe that every single one of those 50 million twentysomethings deserves to know what psychologists, sociologists, neurologists and fertility specialists already know: that claiming your 20s is one of the simplest, yet most transformative, things you can do for work, for love, for your happiness, maybe even for the world.
Now, 20th-century psychologists and
sociologists
were thinking about strangers, but they weren't thinking so dynamically about human relations, and they were thinking about strangers in the context of influencing practices.
Sociologists
have actually found that in recent years Americans are working fewer hours than 50 years ago, but we feel as if we're working more.
Well, here's the paradox of modern science, the paradox of the conclusion I think historians and philosophers and
sociologists
have come to, that actually science is the appeal to authority, but it's not the authority of the individual, no matter how smart that individual is, like Plato or Socrates or Einstein.
Now, when I started looking into collective action, the considerable literature on it is based on what
sociologists
call "social dilemmas."
So a myth that I have to say is sometimes spread a bit by
sociologists
is that our preferences in a romantic partner are a product of our culture, that they're very culturally specific.
The term comes from
sociologists
who were studying communities that proved particularly resilient in times of stress.
Data from psychologists and
sociologists
are quite persuasive here.
Sociologists
like me have long explained that race is a social construction.
Sociologists
Robert Merton and Paul Lazarsfeld set out to learn how unprecedented exposure to wartime propaganda was affecting the public.
I know it sounds a little counterintuitive, intimacy and strangers, but these quick interactions can lead to a feeling that
sociologists
call "fleeting intimacy."
I've done it with
sociologists.
I mean, the industry focuses mainly on the positive sides, so it's the job of historians and philosophers and
sociologists
to highlight the more dangerous potential of all these new technologies.
Economists, sociologists, moral philosophers have understood that, and we are actively looking for collaboration.
But ultimately, the story has a happy ending for Sudhir, who became one of the most respected
sociologists
in the country.
Well, he would turn to people who were called, rather prosaically by sociologists, privatized law enforcement agencies.
A lot of
sociologists
actually are quite disappointed.
And some
sociologists
actually feel that it's a closure, it's a cocooning, that we're disengaging from the public.
I'm always surprised the U.S. Army
sociologists
are discussing of the impact for instance, of soldiers in Iraq having daily contact with their families.
The real estate ads in the neighborhood all very proudly proclaim, "Walking distance to Le Grande Orange," because it provided its neighborhood with what
sociologists
like to call "a third place."
Sociologists
would have a field day with this film.
I'm not going to comment on why this part of the world has been so long plagued by such violence and repression; that's up to
sociologists.
Sociologists
in the US have also documented adverse “neighborhood effects” for poor children in inner cities.
Science has been studied by sociologists, historians, and philosophers, but rarely by scientists themselves.
On February 12, a “collective” of anthropologists, sociologists, and historians published a virulent attack in Le Monde.
Economists, political theorists, moral and political philosophers, sociologists, and even the general public rapidly took notice of what seemed like – and indeed was – a devastating result.
Back then, historians and
sociologists
dug into Zionism supposed “sins” – for example, that Israel’s Arab citizens have never, to this day, enjoyed equal civil rights.
Based on estimates by Chinese sociologists, 500 riots, collective protests, and strikes occur each day, up almost four-fold from a decade ago.
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