Sociology of Science

Peoples of the world, communities, and social structure and change can be applied to biology, earth science, astronomy, chemistry, and physics.

   

Sociology

Sociology can be applied to biology, earth science, astronomy, chemistry, and physics.

Peoples of the world

Nations and major peoples of the world including Western Civilization, Asiatic peoples, African peoples, and American Indian peoples can, and their establishments of biology, earth science, astronomy, chemistry, and physics can be considered.

Communities

So far, many of the scientific advances of the world have come from major communities of the world. Several of these are listed under the peoples they belong to. [ Phoenix, Sydney, Algiers, Harbin, Abidjan, Berlin, Porto Alegre, Barcelona Monterrey, Shantou, Surat, Hangchou, Casablanca, Seattle, Ankara, Melbourne Brasilia, Recife, Athens, Montreal, Pyongyang, Pusan, Cape Town, Fortaleza Salvador, Durban, Kanpur, Medellin]

Social structure and change

Social change

Particular movements

The agricultural revolution is significant. The agrarian revolution with Bronze age movements, early iron age movements, and late iron age movements is important. Modernization includes the Scientific Revolution as one of its important aspects. The industrial revolution including the early industrial revolution, middle industrial revolution and late industrial is important.

Social change factors

Institutional change, cultural change, demographic change, and natural change are also significant.

Social change processes

Innovation, transmission, adaptation, and extinction can be considered.

Social types

Industrial societies including early industrial, middle industrial, and late industrial societies have some connection. Agrarian societies, horticultural societies, and hunting and gathering societies can be connected.

Social structure

community and regional structure, class structure, institutional structure, cultural structure, and anthropological structure is important to scientific advance.


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© 2008 - 2012 Thad Coons
Created 18 Nov 2008, Updated 5 Jan 2012