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Provide a 8 pages analysis while answering the following question: In What Ways Does Sociological Sense Differ from Common Sense. Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA S
Provide a 8 pages analysis while answering the following question: In What Ways Does Sociological Sense Differ from Common Sense. Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide. An abstract is required. The paper shows that despite the lack of nomenclature Marx's ideas have profoundly affected later generations of sociologists. Marx's achievement is in attempting to explain social situations and problems from the point of view of the economic class of constituent groups in society. Max Weber, on the other hand, saw religion to be pivotal to society and hence included religious considerations alongside economic ones. Although Weber helped enrich the understanding of the then-emerging capitalist world order, he did not completely condemn it as Marx did. Despite the differences in their emphasis, both Marx and Weber greatly influenced scholars, politicians and commentators for generations to come. More importantly, their theories and insights have a direct appeal to lay, people, for the state of the economic and political organization of society has a direct and immediate bearing on its members. Marx and Weber can also be credited with making sociological discourse accessible to the general population. And by doing so, they expanded the reach of the discipline to a wider audience and enabled it to interpret commonplace events in uncommon ways. In other words, their works interpreted and presented social, political and economic events in an alternative perspective, that contrasted or enhanced the common-sense view. The rest of this essay will extend this contention by way of referring to practical examples of such cases.
Max Weber's works emphasize the influence of religious beliefs on the affairs of state and society. During his lifetime Christianity was the dominant religious ideology in Germany and most of Europe. So Weber asserts that the rise and flourishing of capitalist economic systems in this region are attributable to certain concepts in the Christian ethic. In other words, the seeds for the eventual flowering of industrial capitalism in Europe from the eighteenth century onwards were already evident in the moral fabric of society as .conditioned by principles laid out by Christianity.