Conflict Theory claims that society is in a state of perpetual conflict and competition for limited resources.
Social theories - Intro to Sociology - 0 views
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those who have perpetually try to increase their wealth at the expense and suffering of those who have not.
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power struggle
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Chapter 08 - Deviance and Crime - 0 views
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xactly who has the power and authority to define the behavior as being normal or deviant.
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education
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religions,
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The Sixties . War & Peace | PBS - 0 views
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C: There is no date to the article but the website looks new and it is by PBS R: This article helps me understand how many millions of men went to Vietnam and where drafted A: I can not find who wrote the article but it is from PBS which is well known for precise information. It is a .org A: The information about the Vietnam war is accurate from what I know from my personal knowledge. It is un bias it shows both sides. P:The purpose is to inform us about the Vietnam war
Chapter 01 - History and Introduction - 0 views
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Auguste Comte (born 1798
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ociety's knowledge passed through 3 stages
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cience-based). Positivism is the objective and value-free observation, comparison, and experimentation applied to scientific inquiry
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Chapter 09 - Stratification - 0 views
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Layers occur almost everywhere in nature: in tissues of the human body, rock formations in the ground, atmospheres around the earth, and in societies of every nation on the earth. We call these layers strata and the process of layering stratification.
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Social Stratification is the socio-economic layering of society's members according to property, power, and prestige. Property is all the wealth, investments, deeded and titled properties, and other tangible sources of income. Power is the ability to get one's way even in the face of opposition to one's goals. Prestige is the degree of social honor attached with your position in society.
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SAVE | Suicide Facts - 0 views
2006 Census: Family portrait: Continuity and change in Canadian families and households... - 0 views
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Currency: This website does indirectly answer my question, by comparing Canadian families in 2006. relevance: the authors of this website are: Anne Milan, Mireille Vezina and Carie Walls, who are trusted because they are in the demography divison of Stats Canada. Authority: This information should not be false because it is on the Stat Canada website so, it is made by the government. Accuracy: This website is very accurate with their information, it is mostly stats that are probably correct and trustworthy because it is made by the government of Canada. Purpose: this is not at all to sell anything nor is it bias, only to inform.
I found this one funny. - 0 views
a somewhat funny idea. - 0 views
NetGen Education Project - About - 0 views
Video games help focus on fine detail - 1 views
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Video games help focus on fine detail From: The Australian February 13, 2007 12:00AM Increase Text Size Decrease Text Size Print Email Share Add to Digg Add to del.icio.us Add to Facebook Add to Kwoff Add to Myspace Add to Newsvine What are these? PLAYING video games that involve high levels of visual action on a daily basis can improve your ability to see fine detail, a study shows. Researchers at the University of Rochester in the US have found that people who played action video games for a few hours a day over the course of a month sharpened their ability to identify letters by about 20 per cent. "Action video game play changes the way our brains process visual information," says Daphne Bavelier, professor of brain and cognitive sciences at the university. "After just 30 hours, players showed a substantial increase in the spatial resolution of their vision, meaning they could see figures like those on an eye chart more clearly, even when other symbols crowded in."
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PLAYING video games that involve high levels of visual action on a daily basis can improve your ability to see fine detail, a study shows. Researchers at the University of Rochester in the US have found that people who played action video games for a few hours a day over the course of a month sharpened their ability to identify letters by about 20 per cent. "Action video game play changes the way our brains process visual information," says Daphne Bavelier, professor of brain and cognitive sciences at the university.
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These games push the human visual system to the limits and the brain adapts to it," she says. "That learning carries over into other activities and possibly everyday life."
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This website talks about how video games help looking at the fine detail. It states that playing action video games such as halo or call of duty refine your ability to see fine detail. This characteristic is important for doctors or architects. This website is credible becuase it took it's information from the university of Rochester in the United States study.
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