Deck 1: Understanding Social Problems

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Question
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of the individual is called a(n) _____.
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Question
A problem whose causes and solutions lie outside the individual and the immediate environment is called a(n) _____.
Question
There are three major theoretical perspectives in sociology. They are structural functionalism, conflict theory, and _____.
Question
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called _____.
Question
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called _____.
Question
A theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, the individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called _____.
Question
A(n) _____ is the behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure.
Question
A(n) _____ is the arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such resources as wealth, power, and prestige.
Question
A predisposition about something in one's environment is called a(n) _____.
Question
A set of ideas that explain or justify some aspect of social reality is called a(n) _____.
Question
Social problems can be manifested at multiple levels of social life. They can be manifested at the individual level, the group level, and the _____.
Question
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called _____.
Question
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called _____.
Question
The _____ is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.
Question
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the _____.
Question
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that where necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of the _____.
Question
In the context of critical thinking, _____ is the process of defining what is abstract as something concrete.
Question
The fallacy of authority means _____.
Question
The assertion that what is true of the part is necessarily true of the whole is called _____.
Question
_____ is designed to gain information about so­cial problems so that one can have a valid understanding of them and employ realistic efforts in resolving them.
Question
The variables in an experiment that are manipulated to see how they affect changes in the other variables are called _____.
Question
The variables in an experiment that are influenced by the independent variables are called _____.
Question
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of an individual is called a(n) _____.

A) personal problem
B) social problem
C) institutional problem
D) societal problem
Question
A problem that has causes and solutions which lie outside an individual and the immediate environment is called a(n) _____.

A) personal problem
B) social problem
C) institutional problem
D) societal problem
Question
Which famous sociologist referred to personal problems as the "personal troubles of milieu"?

A) Robert Merton
B) Emile Durkheim
C) Max Weber
D) C. Wright Mills
Question
Which famous sociologist referred to social problems as the "public issues of social structure"?

A) Robert Merton
B) Emile Durkheim
C) Max Weber
D) C. Wright Mills
Question
If a problem is defined as personal, _____ are employed to cope with the problem.

A) individual strategies
B) collective strategies
C) societal strategies
D) professional strategies
Question
A social problem is defined as a condition or pattern of behavior that:

A) validates some other condition or pattern of behavior.
B) is caused, facilitated, or prolonged by factors that operate at a single level of social life.
C) is defined as compatible with the desired quality of life.
D) requires social action to be resolved.
Question
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Question
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Question
A sociological theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, an individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Question
In structural functionalism, a problem involves a system of interdependent parts, including shared expectations about behavior called _____.

A) norms
B) roles
C) contradictions
D) values
Question
The behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure is called a(n) _____.

A) norm
B) role
C) expectation
D) function
Question
Things that are preferred because they are defined as having worth are called _____.

A) attitudes
B) ideologies
C) beliefs
D) values
Question
The arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such valued resources as wealth, power, and prestige is called _____.

A) a stratification system
B) culture
C) society
D) intuition
Question
Which of the following is true according to the symbolic interactionist approach in sociology?

A) A problem involves a system of interdependent parts, including institutions, norms, roles, and values.
B) Contradictions and inequalities exist between the parts of a social system and generate conflict between groups.
C) A pattern of inequality of wealth, power, and prestige exists in all societies.
D) The perspectives of individuals, including their attitudes and ideologies, are important components of the social system.
Question
A set of ideas that explain or justify some aspect of social reality is called _____.

A) an attitude
B) an ideology
C) a value
D) a role
Question
Which of the following is an assumption of the structural functionalist approach in sociology?

A) Society is an integrated system of interdependent parts, bound together by shared values and norms.
B) Society is a system of diverse groups, with conflicting values and interests, vying with each other for power, wealth, and other valued resources.
C) Society is an arena of interacting individuals who behave in accord with their definitions of situations and who create shared meanings as they interact.
D) Society is a system of the perspectives of individuals, including their attitudes and ideologies.
Question
How does the conflict theory explain social problems generally?

A) Problems occur when patterns of social interaction alter the social structural factors.
B) A situation or form of behavior becomes a problem when people define it as such.
C) Problems are the result of dominance over, and exploitation of, some groups by others.
D) Problems arise out of social disorganization, a state in which consensus about norms has broken down.
Question
How does structural functionalism explain poverty?

A) The upper and middle classes oppress and exploit the poor and create ideologies that blame the poor and justify their poverty.
B) Political, economic, and educational institutions are not functioning adequately, so that old arrangements are obsolete before new arrangements are in place.
C) Poverty became a social problem in the United States when people accepted that people remain poor when they define their poverty as the result of their own deficiencies.
D) Upper- and middle-class lawmakers regularly support corporate welfare but reject such welfare ideas for the poor as a guaranteed minimum annual income.
Question
The _____ uses three broad categories: basic human needs (such as nutrition, medical care, and sanitation); foundations of well-being (health, environmental quality, access to basic knowledge and information); and opportunity (personal rights and freedom, tolerance, access to advanced education).

A) World Values Survey
B) World Happiness Report
C) Human Development Index
D) Social Progress Index
Question
The idea of the globalization of the economy would be measured at what level of social life?

A) individual level
B) group level
C) societal level
D) global level
Question
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called _____.

A) the fallacy of dramatic instance
B) the fallacy of thinking
C) critical thinking
D) scientific methodology
Question
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called _____.

A) the fallacy of dramatic instance
B) the fallacy of thinking
C) critical thinking
D) scientific methodology
Question
The _____ is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.

A) fallacy of dramatic instance
B) fallacy of thinking
C) fallacy of retrospective determinism
D) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
Question
In the context of critical thinking, which of the following is true of the fallacy of retrospective determinism?

A) It is the tendency to overgeneralize, to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument.
B) It asserts that what happened historically had to happen, and it had to happen just the way it did.
C) It is an idea, a way of thinking about a particular collectivity of people.
D) It attributes the cause of a particular problem to society and denies individual responsibility.
Question
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is the tendency to make something abstract into something definite.

A) fallacy of dramatic instance
B) fallacy of retrospective determinism
C) fallacy of personal attack
D) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
Question
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the _____.

A) fallacy of personal attack
B) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
C) fallacy of dramatic instance
D) fallacy of appeal of prejudice
Question
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is the tendency of debaters to use popular preconceptions or passions to convince others of the correctness of their position.

A) fallacy of retrospective determinism
B) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
C) fallacy of dramatic instance
D) fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Question
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that were necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of _____.

A) the fallacy of circular reasoning
B) the fallacy of appeal to prejudice
C) the fallacy of misplaced concreteness
D) the fallacy of personal attack
Question
The fallacy of authority means _____.

A) an illegitimate appeal to authority
B) observing an experiment
C) conducting an experiment for yourself
D) giving a lecture on research that you have conducted
Question
The assertion that what is true of the part is necessarily true of the whole is called _____.

A) the fallacy of non sequitur
B) the fallacy of personal attack
C) the fallacy of composition
D) the fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Question
The term "non sequitur" means _____.

A) "to speak the truth"
B) "it does not follow"
C) "it is a given"
D) "it is not possible"
Question
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is defined as something that does not follow logically from what has preceded it.

A) fallacy of non sequitur
B) fallacy of authority
C) fallacy of composition
D) fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Question
A method of research in which a sample of people are interviewed or given questionnaires in order to get data on some phenomenon is called _____.

A) an experiment
B) a survey
C) a record study
D) an observational study
Question
Your position in the social system based on economic resources, power, education, prestige, and life style is called your _____.

A) cultural position
B) role
C) inherited status
D) socioeconomic status
Question
A _____ is any trait or characteristic that varies in value or magnitude.

A) social trait
B) phenomenon
C) role
D) variable
Question
A statistical method for determining the probability that research findings occurred by change is called _____.

A) the mean
B) a test of reliability
C) a test of significance
D) regression analysis
Question
The organization of data to show the number of times each item occurs in a distribution is called _____.

A) the mean
B) the frequency distribution
C) the median
D) the range
Question
The _____ is the score in a distribution which has half of the scores above it and half of the scores below it.

A) mode
B) mean
C) median
D) range
Question
The variable in an experiment that is manipulated to see how it effects changes in the other variable is called _____.

A) the dependent variable
B) the independent variable
C) the control variable
D) the spurious variable
Question
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of an individual is called a social problem.
Question
A problem whose causes and solutions lie outside the individual and the immediate environment is called a social problem.
Question
The famous sociologist Kai Erickson referred to personal problems as the "personal troubles of milieu."
Question
The famous sociologist C. Wright Mills referred to social problems as the "public issues of social structure."
Question
There are three major theoretical perspectives in sociology. They are structural functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism.
Question
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called structural functionalism.
Question
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called structural functionalism.
Question
A theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, the individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called symbolic interactionism.
Question
A symbolic interactionist approach would stress the fact that people learn criminal behavior by communicating with, and accepting for themselves the perspective of, others who approve of such behavior.
Question
A status is the behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure.
Question
A stratification system is the arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such resources as wealth, power, and prestige.
Question
Social problems can be manifested at multiple levels of social life. They can be manifested at the individual level, the group level, and the cultural level.
Question
The idea of the globalization of the economy would be measured at the global level of social life.
Question
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called critical thinking.
Question
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called the fallacy of dramatic instance.
Question
The fallacy of dramatic instance is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.
Question
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the fallacy of personal attack.
Question
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that where necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of the fallacy of appeal to prejudice.
Question
The most common research method used in sociology is research experiments.
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Deck 1: Understanding Social Problems
1
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of the individual is called a(n) _____.
personal problem
2
A problem whose causes and solutions lie outside the individual and the immediate environment is called a(n) _____.
social problem
3
There are three major theoretical perspectives in sociology. They are structural functionalism, conflict theory, and _____.
symbolic interactionism
4
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called _____.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called _____.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, the individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called _____.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A(n) _____ is the behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
A(n) _____ is the arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such resources as wealth, power, and prestige.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
9
A predisposition about something in one's environment is called a(n) _____.
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k this deck
10
A set of ideas that explain or justify some aspect of social reality is called a(n) _____.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Social problems can be manifested at multiple levels of social life. They can be manifested at the individual level, the group level, and the _____.
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k this deck
12
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called _____.
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
13
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called _____.
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k this deck
14
The _____ is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
15
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the _____.
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that where necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of the _____.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In the context of critical thinking, _____ is the process of defining what is abstract as something concrete.
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k this deck
18
The fallacy of authority means _____.
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k this deck
19
The assertion that what is true of the part is necessarily true of the whole is called _____.
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
20
_____ is designed to gain information about so­cial problems so that one can have a valid understanding of them and employ realistic efforts in resolving them.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The variables in an experiment that are manipulated to see how they affect changes in the other variables are called _____.
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k this deck
22
The variables in an experiment that are influenced by the independent variables are called _____.
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k this deck
23
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of an individual is called a(n) _____.

A) personal problem
B) social problem
C) institutional problem
D) societal problem
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
A problem that has causes and solutions which lie outside an individual and the immediate environment is called a(n) _____.

A) personal problem
B) social problem
C) institutional problem
D) societal problem
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Which famous sociologist referred to personal problems as the "personal troubles of milieu"?

A) Robert Merton
B) Emile Durkheim
C) Max Weber
D) C. Wright Mills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which famous sociologist referred to social problems as the "public issues of social structure"?

A) Robert Merton
B) Emile Durkheim
C) Max Weber
D) C. Wright Mills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
If a problem is defined as personal, _____ are employed to cope with the problem.

A) individual strategies
B) collective strategies
C) societal strategies
D) professional strategies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
A social problem is defined as a condition or pattern of behavior that:

A) validates some other condition or pattern of behavior.
B) is caused, facilitated, or prolonged by factors that operate at a single level of social life.
C) is defined as compatible with the desired quality of life.
D) requires social action to be resolved.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
A sociological theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, an individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called _____.

A) structural functionalism
B) conflict theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) cultural theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In structural functionalism, a problem involves a system of interdependent parts, including shared expectations about behavior called _____.

A) norms
B) roles
C) contradictions
D) values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure is called a(n) _____.

A) norm
B) role
C) expectation
D) function
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Things that are preferred because they are defined as having worth are called _____.

A) attitudes
B) ideologies
C) beliefs
D) values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such valued resources as wealth, power, and prestige is called _____.

A) a stratification system
B) culture
C) society
D) intuition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following is true according to the symbolic interactionist approach in sociology?

A) A problem involves a system of interdependent parts, including institutions, norms, roles, and values.
B) Contradictions and inequalities exist between the parts of a social system and generate conflict between groups.
C) A pattern of inequality of wealth, power, and prestige exists in all societies.
D) The perspectives of individuals, including their attitudes and ideologies, are important components of the social system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
A set of ideas that explain or justify some aspect of social reality is called _____.

A) an attitude
B) an ideology
C) a value
D) a role
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which of the following is an assumption of the structural functionalist approach in sociology?

A) Society is an integrated system of interdependent parts, bound together by shared values and norms.
B) Society is a system of diverse groups, with conflicting values and interests, vying with each other for power, wealth, and other valued resources.
C) Society is an arena of interacting individuals who behave in accord with their definitions of situations and who create shared meanings as they interact.
D) Society is a system of the perspectives of individuals, including their attitudes and ideologies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
How does the conflict theory explain social problems generally?

A) Problems occur when patterns of social interaction alter the social structural factors.
B) A situation or form of behavior becomes a problem when people define it as such.
C) Problems are the result of dominance over, and exploitation of, some groups by others.
D) Problems arise out of social disorganization, a state in which consensus about norms has broken down.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
How does structural functionalism explain poverty?

A) The upper and middle classes oppress and exploit the poor and create ideologies that blame the poor and justify their poverty.
B) Political, economic, and educational institutions are not functioning adequately, so that old arrangements are obsolete before new arrangements are in place.
C) Poverty became a social problem in the United States when people accepted that people remain poor when they define their poverty as the result of their own deficiencies.
D) Upper- and middle-class lawmakers regularly support corporate welfare but reject such welfare ideas for the poor as a guaranteed minimum annual income.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The _____ uses three broad categories: basic human needs (such as nutrition, medical care, and sanitation); foundations of well-being (health, environmental quality, access to basic knowledge and information); and opportunity (personal rights and freedom, tolerance, access to advanced education).

A) World Values Survey
B) World Happiness Report
C) Human Development Index
D) Social Progress Index
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The idea of the globalization of the economy would be measured at what level of social life?

A) individual level
B) group level
C) societal level
D) global level
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called _____.

A) the fallacy of dramatic instance
B) the fallacy of thinking
C) critical thinking
D) scientific methodology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called _____.

A) the fallacy of dramatic instance
B) the fallacy of thinking
C) critical thinking
D) scientific methodology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The _____ is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.

A) fallacy of dramatic instance
B) fallacy of thinking
C) fallacy of retrospective determinism
D) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
In the context of critical thinking, which of the following is true of the fallacy of retrospective determinism?

A) It is the tendency to overgeneralize, to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument.
B) It asserts that what happened historically had to happen, and it had to happen just the way it did.
C) It is an idea, a way of thinking about a particular collectivity of people.
D) It attributes the cause of a particular problem to society and denies individual responsibility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is the tendency to make something abstract into something definite.

A) fallacy of dramatic instance
B) fallacy of retrospective determinism
C) fallacy of personal attack
D) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the _____.

A) fallacy of personal attack
B) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
C) fallacy of dramatic instance
D) fallacy of appeal of prejudice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is the tendency of debaters to use popular preconceptions or passions to convince others of the correctness of their position.

A) fallacy of retrospective determinism
B) fallacy of misplaced concreteness
C) fallacy of dramatic instance
D) fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that were necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of _____.

A) the fallacy of circular reasoning
B) the fallacy of appeal to prejudice
C) the fallacy of misplaced concreteness
D) the fallacy of personal attack
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
The fallacy of authority means _____.

A) an illegitimate appeal to authority
B) observing an experiment
C) conducting an experiment for yourself
D) giving a lecture on research that you have conducted
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
The assertion that what is true of the part is necessarily true of the whole is called _____.

A) the fallacy of non sequitur
B) the fallacy of personal attack
C) the fallacy of composition
D) the fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
The term "non sequitur" means _____.

A) "to speak the truth"
B) "it does not follow"
C) "it is a given"
D) "it is not possible"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
In the context of critical thinking, the _____ is defined as something that does not follow logically from what has preceded it.

A) fallacy of non sequitur
B) fallacy of authority
C) fallacy of composition
D) fallacy of appeal to prejudice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
A method of research in which a sample of people are interviewed or given questionnaires in order to get data on some phenomenon is called _____.

A) an experiment
B) a survey
C) a record study
D) an observational study
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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56
Your position in the social system based on economic resources, power, education, prestige, and life style is called your _____.

A) cultural position
B) role
C) inherited status
D) socioeconomic status
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57
A _____ is any trait or characteristic that varies in value or magnitude.

A) social trait
B) phenomenon
C) role
D) variable
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58
A statistical method for determining the probability that research findings occurred by change is called _____.

A) the mean
B) a test of reliability
C) a test of significance
D) regression analysis
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59
The organization of data to show the number of times each item occurs in a distribution is called _____.

A) the mean
B) the frequency distribution
C) the median
D) the range
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60
The _____ is the score in a distribution which has half of the scores above it and half of the scores below it.

A) mode
B) mean
C) median
D) range
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61
The variable in an experiment that is manipulated to see how it effects changes in the other variable is called _____.

A) the dependent variable
B) the independent variable
C) the control variable
D) the spurious variable
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62
A problem that can be explained in terms of the qualities of an individual is called a social problem.
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63
A problem whose causes and solutions lie outside the individual and the immediate environment is called a social problem.
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64
The famous sociologist Kai Erickson referred to personal problems as the "personal troubles of milieu."
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65
The famous sociologist C. Wright Mills referred to social problems as the "public issues of social structure."
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66
There are three major theoretical perspectives in sociology. They are structural functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism.
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67
A sociological theory that focuses on social systems and how their interdependent parts maintain order is called structural functionalism.
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68
A theory that focuses on contradictory interests, inequalities between social groups, and the resulting conflict and change is called structural functionalism.
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69
A theory that focuses on the interaction between individuals, the individual's perception of situations, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction is called symbolic interactionism.
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70
A symbolic interactionist approach would stress the fact that people learn criminal behavior by communicating with, and accepting for themselves the perspective of, others who approve of such behavior.
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71
A status is the behavior associated with a particular position in the social structure.
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72
A stratification system is the arrangement of society into groups that are unequal with regard to such resources as wealth, power, and prestige.
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73
Social problems can be manifested at multiple levels of social life. They can be manifested at the individual level, the group level, and the cultural level.
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74
The idea of the globalization of the economy would be measured at the global level of social life.
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75
The process of carefully attending to spoken or written information in order to evaluate its validity is called critical thinking.
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76
The tendency to overgeneralize, that is to use one, two, or three cases to support an entire argument, is called the fallacy of dramatic instance.
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77
The fallacy of dramatic instance is the argument that things could not have worked out any other way than the way they did.
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78
A tactic among debaters is to attack the opponent personally when they can't support their position by reason, logic, or facts. This is called the fallacy of personal attack.
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79
When a person uses conclusions to support the assumptions that where necessary to make the conclusions, it is an example of the fallacy of appeal to prejudice.
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80
The most common research method used in sociology is research experiments.
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