Origin of Sociology |
Auguste Comte (1798–1857), widely
considered the “father of sociology,” became interested in studying society
because of the changes that took place as a result of the French Revolution and
the Industrial Revolution.
During the French Revolution, which began in 1789, France’s
class system changed dramatically. Aristocrats suddenly lost their money and
status, while peasants, who had been at the bottom of the social ladder, rose
to more powerful and influential positions. The Industrial Revolution
followed on the heels of the French Revolution, unfolding in Western
Europe throughout the 1800s.
During the Industrial Revolution, people abandoned
a life of agriculture and moved to cities to find factory jobs. They worked
long hours in dangerous conditions for low pay. New social problems emerged
and, for many decades, little was done to address the plight of the urban poor.
Comte looked at the extensive changes brought about by the French Revolution
and the Industrial Revolution and tried to make sense of them. He felt that the
social sciences that existed at the time, including political science and
history, couldn’t adequately explain the chaos and upheaval he saw around him.
He decided an entirely new science was needed.
He called this new science sociology, which
comes from the root word socius, a Latin word that means “companion” or “being
with others.”
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