
audiobook
by Robert Ezra Park, E. W. (Ernest Watson) Burgess
INTRODUCTION TO THE SCIENCE OF SOCIOLOGY - By - Robert E. Park and Ernest W. Burgess
PREFACE
CHAPTER I - SOCIOLOGY AND THE SOCIAL SCIENCES - I. SOCIOLOGY AND "SCIENTIFIC" HISTORY
II. HISTORICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL FACTS
III. HUMAN NATURE AND LAW
IV. HISTORY, NATURAL HISTORY, AND SOCIOLOGY
V. THE SOCIAL ORGANISM: HUMANITY OR LEVIATHAN?
VI. SOCIAL CONTROL AND SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT
VII. SOCIAL CONTROL AND THE COLLECTIVE MIND
VIII. SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH
This volume offers a clear, systematic entry into the study of society, weaving together observations from a broad spectrum of perspectives into a cohesive framework. It invites learners to move beyond passive reading, urging them to record their own observations, organize material, and actively engage with the concepts presented. By treating sociology as a developing science, the text encourages students to treat opinions and attitudes as data to be dissected, classified, and understood in context.
Each chapter follows a consistent four‑part layout—introduction, source material, investigative questions, and a bibliography—that raises questions before offering pathways for further inquiry. The bibliographies are curated to showcase a range of viewpoints rather than serve as exhaustive references, prompting readers to explore diverse arguments. Through this methodical approach, the book equips newcomers with the tools to conduct their own sociological investigations and to see the discipline as a collaborative, ever‑evolving enterprise.
Language
en
Duration
~42 hours (2433K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Curtis Weyant, Josephine Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by Case Western Reserve University Preservation Department Digital Library.)
Release date
2009-04-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1864–1944
Best known as a founding figure in the Chicago School of sociology, he helped turn the study of city life, race relations, and migration into something observed on the ground rather than discussed only in theory. Before academia, he worked as a journalist, and that reporter’s eye shaped the vivid, street-level quality of his writing.
View all books1886–1966
A pioneering sociologist of city life and family relationships, this University of Chicago scholar helped shape how modern readers understand neighborhoods, social change, and everyday urban experience. His books brought academic sociology to a wide audience and remained influential for decades.
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