Deck 4: A: Society
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Deck 4: A: Society
1
Agriculture differs from horticulture by making use of the animal-drawn plow that can cultivate much more land.
True
2
Gerhard Lenski dismissed technology as of little importance in shaping cultural patterns.
False
3
Hunting and gathering societies around the world contain a large and increasing share of global population
False
4
The subordination of women by men is clearly evident in hunting and gathering societies.
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5
Gerhard Lenski used the concept "sociocultural evolution" to refer to how technological innovation changes the shape of societies.
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6
Agrarian societies are more alike than hunting and gathering societies are.
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7
Hunting and gathering societies generate a productive surplus.
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8
Huge empires-such as the Roman Empire that included tens of millions of people and several million square miles-were based on agrarian technology.
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9
Hunting and gathering societies have elected leaders.
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10
Forces of nature have the greatest effect on societies with the simplest technology.
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11
Gerhard Lenski claims that the invention of horticultural or pastoral technology is a clear case of societal progress toward a better way of life.
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12
Horticultural societies typically form permanent settlements.
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13
Many pastoral societies are nomadic.
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14
Compared to hunting and gathering societies,horticultural and pastoral societies have more productive specialization and greater social inequality.
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15
Industrial societies use powerful sources of energy to drive large machinery.
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16
Agrarian societies typically have dramatic social inequality.
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17
Industrial technology tends to weaken the family,making it less the center of people's lives.
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18
The Industrial Revolution was underway in parts of Europe by the time the explorer Christopher Columbus reached the Americas in 1492.
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19
Pastoral and horticultural societies are not capable of a productive surplus.
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20
Hunting and gathering societies are nomadic.
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21
Marx claimed that capitalism alienated workers from their work,and also from each other.
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22
Gerhard Lenski argues that,eventually,we can expect technological invention to solve problems of peace and justice around the world.
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23
Marx thought capitalism would bring class conflict more out in the open.
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24
In hopes of salvation,Calvinists were quick to share their wealth with the poor.
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25
Karl Marx argued that society's infrastructure and superstructure are always in conflict.
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26
Weber believed that people living in preindustrial societies hold strongly to rationality,while members of industrial societies celebrate tradition.
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27
Marx believed that proletarians could never overcome their false consciousness.
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28
Weber argued that the development of industrial capitalism had its roots in a set of religious ideas linked to Calvinism.
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29
Marx looked forward to the transformation of capitalism into a more equal and humane society that he called socialism.
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30
Karl Marx claimed that societies were defined by patterns of social conflict.
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31
Max Weber used the concept "rationalization of society" to point to historical change from tradition to rationality as the dominant mode of human thought.
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32
In general,industrialization results in less schooling and a sharp increase in the share of the population that is illiterate.
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33
According to Karl Marx,the foundation of society is the family.
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34
Marx viewed industrial capitalism as highly rational and Weber did not.
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35
Industrial technology has raised living standards in a number of societies.
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36
Marx argued that industrial-capitalist societies had two main social classes: capitalists and proletarians
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37
Marx viewed alienation as an aid to social change.
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38
A postindustrial society uses computers and other information technology to operate much of the economy.
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39
The Information Revolution has been most evident in the poor nations of the world.
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40
For Max Weber,an "ideal type" meant something that is the very best of its kind.
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41
Rational,modern societies,according to Weber,were becoming more personal.
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42
Durkheim claimed that,in modern societies such as Canada,people with the strongest social bonds had the highest rates of suicide.
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43
Modern societies differ from traditional societies by having more productive specialization-that is,a more complex division of labor.
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44
Modern societies are held together mostly by shared moral sentiments.
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45
Modern societies provide individuals with less moral regulation than traditional societies do.
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46
For Durkheim,the key to change in a society is an expanding division of labour.
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47
According to Weber,capitalism,bureaucracy,and science are all expressions of rationality.
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48
Weber viewed rationality as a liberating force that would free the human spirit.
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49
Durkheim pointed to the functions of social patterns for the operation of society as a whole.
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50
Karl Marx and Max Weber agreed that modern society generates alienation,although for different reasons.
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51
Emile Durkheim viewed society as an external,objective reality.
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52
Durkheim used the concept "anomie" to mean the same thing as Marx's concept of "alienation."
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53
Both Marx and the Lenskis saw the struggle between classes as the engine for change.
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