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39. Religion in modern society: religion and science, secularization, religious revivalism, fundamentalism

There are two major opinions regarding the relatioship between science and religion. Religion and science are mutually conflicting and Religion and science are not mutually opposing.

The view that Religion and Science ae mutually conflicting  Religion is based on faith and rituals whereas science depends on observations experiments,verifications,proofs and facts.Ritualism,religious fundamentalism and fanaticism rooted in religion are very much opposed to science. According to Kingsley Davis there are two important causes for the conflict between religion and science. Science deals with the known or the empirical world.Religion is concerned with the unknown or supernatural world. Fundamentalists are portrayed as static, literalist, retrogressive and extremist. The term fundamentalists cannot be applied to the entire Muslim world especially when Muslims make up the majority of the population in at least 40 countries. Secularization explores its history, the sociology, America's exceptionalism and the revival of world religions. Secularism is a system or ideology based on the principle that there should be a sphere of knowledge, values, and action that is independent of religious authority, but it does not necessarily exclude religion from having any role in political and social affairs. Secularization, however, is a process which does lead to exclusion.

40. The object and the subject of Sociology

Sociology is the objective study of human society and social interaction. As any other science, sociology has its own object, subject and methods of research. Like other scientists, sociologists strive to reach conclusions and present findings that are objective – not biased by emotion or preferences. It is this commitment to scientific methods that makes sociology different from the nonscientific disciplines of the humanities, such as literature, religion, and philosophy. Sociology’s ultimate aim is to develop a refined body of scientific knowledge that can explain and, in some cases, predict social events. The fact that sociologists, like their subject matter, are sensitive and moral beings places strict limits on what and how they can study. Sociologists cannot, for example, deprive children of love or human contact in order to test theories about human development. Nor can they start a war and engineer its conditions to see how people respond or how much they can ″tolerate.″ Because people are so different from the kinds of things studied by natural scientists, many sociologists modify and add to the methods of natural sciences.

41. The main categories (terms) of Sociology

The sociological approach.

In its approach to the study of society and social interaction, sociology strives to be scientific. This means that sociologists do not rely on insight, belief, or hearsay.

In sociology, a theory is a statement or series of statements that uses concepts to explain problems, actions, or behavior. An effective theory will have both explanatory and predictive power. An essential task in building a sociological theory is to examine the relationship between bits of data, gathered through research, that may seem completely unrelated. Levels of Analysis Sociologists employ different ″lenses″ when they focus on society. Sociological studies can therefore be distinguished by their level of analysis. In fact, we can learn a great deal by using macro-level and micro-level analysis to study the same problem. For example, we might try to understand criminal behavior at the macroscopic level by analyzing crime rates in various countries and at the microscopic level by examining the social forces that influence individuals to become criminals or delinquents.

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