Social relation
relationship between two people or groups in which their thinking, acting or feeling is mutually related
(Redirected from Social relations)
A social relation, social interaction or social life' in social science is any relationship between two or more individuals. Social relations derived from individual agency form the basis of social structure and the basic object for analysis by social scientists.
This sociology-related article is a stub. You can help out with Wikiquote by expanding it! |
Quotes
edit- I think that no forms of social interaction—including religion, love, crime, and fertility choice—are immune from the power of economic reasoning.
- Robert Barro Nothing Is Sacred (2002)
- I mean this report to serve as a sort of handbook detailing one sociological perspective from which social life can be studied, especially the kind of social life that is organised within the physical confines of a building or plant. A set of features will be described which together form a framework that can be applied to any concrete social establishment, be it domestic, industrial, or commercial.
- Erving Goffman (1959), The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Garden City, NY: Doubleday Anchor. Preface
- Institutions are the humanly devised constraints that structure political, economic, and social interaction. They consist of both informal constraints (sanctions, taboos, customs, traditions, and codes of conduct), and formal rules (constitutions, laws, property rights). Throughout history, institutions have been devised by human beings to create order and reduce uncertainty in exchange.
- Douglass North. 1991. "Institutions." Journal of Economic Perspectives, 5(1): 97-112; Abstract
- The relationship of agency is one of the oldest and commonest codified codes of social interaction. We will say that an agency relationship has arisen between two (or more) parties when one, designated as the agent, acts for the other, designated the principal, in a particular domain of decision problems. Examples of agency are universal.
- Stephen A. Ross "The Economic Theory of Agency: The Principal's Problem," Amer. Econom. Rev., 63 (1973), 134-139; As cited in Eisenhardt (1985, 136)
- They say sociopaths are dangerous because they know the subtleties of social interaction better than most people and they use this knowledge to use and exploit people. Well, it seems to me people with Asperger's are the opposite of sociopaths.
- The techniques of artificial intelligence are to the mind what bureaucracy is to human social interaction.
- Terry Winograd, "Thinking Machines: Can there be? Are we?", in The Boundaries of Humanity: Humans, Animals, Machines (1991), ed. James J. Sheehan and Morton Sosna, p. 213