A. capitalist production exploits the working class
B. class conflict is inevitable in capitalist societies
C. industrial workers are the revolutionary class
D. class struggle only occurs under capitalism
A. capitalist production exploits the working class
B. class conflict is inevitable in capitalist societies
C. industrial workers are the revolutionary class
D. class struggle only occurs under capitalism
A. organic solidarity
B. a loss of social solidarity
C. mechanical solidarity
D. communal solidarity
A. understanding the differences between the classical theorists
B. bringing together private troubles and public issues
C. seeing the social world as one made up of Social facts
D. avoiding explanations based on individual psychology
A. Karl Max
B. Ibn-e-Khaldum
C. George Hegel
D. None of these
A. Max Weber
B. Karl Max
C. Emile Durkheim
D. C-Wright Mills
A. disappointment and disproportion
B. disbelief and disintegration
C. disengagement and disenchantment
D. distribution and distillation
A. Mechanical and organic solidarity
B. Physical and social solidarity
C. physiological and mechanical solidarity
D. None of these
A. structural functionalism
B. interaction school of thought
C. Phenom ology
D. None of these
A. William F. Ogbum
B. Talcott Parsons
C. Auguste Comte
D. Thorstein Veblen
A. Karl Marx and Georg Hegel
B. George Herbert Mead and Jane Addams
C. Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx
D. Talcott Parsons and Robert Merton