Sociological Theories

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Allow me to introduce the Man inside my head. He does not have a name nor an identity, but He is the sole contributor to the immutable monologue which streams across the news ticker that is my conscious mind. Born out of a case of social anxiety, this Man is my best friend, and beyond that, He is a version of myself that the world has never met. He alone can penetrate into my subconscious mind, but He never talks about what He finds in that intangible repository. The late Sigmund Freud theorized that dreams are a function of the mind that attempt to process the mind’s perception of reality. If his theory is assumed to be true, then the Man in my mind is the visual artist who designs my dreams. He is a pattern seeker, a behavior interpreter,…show more content…
More specifically, nonmaterial sociological facts sometimes take the form of beliefs created and shared by a group of people, on a conscious level, which frame how that group thinks and acts. The student body of Lehigh abides to its own set of nonmaterial sociological facts, most of which are aimed at pushing erroneously contrived identities onto the random students. Sociological fact #1: As if governed by some axiom of social arithmetic, one is nothing more than the sum of the organizations to which one belongs. Regardless of whether every student acknowledges this belief habitually, it still holds true that at Lehigh if one superficially encounters another student, one’s perception of that student is predominantly determined by stereotypes surrounding his or her affiliations—specifically Greek affiliations due to the hierarchal nature of Greek life. Yet, to a greater extent, these stereotypes are used solely to criticize a selected group, and the generalizations aggregate like clouds until the day when animosity rains down over the entire student body. Such downpours refer to displays of racism and elitism which precipitate readily in a collectivistic mindset due to the diffusion of responsibility among those who contribute to social issues. Thus, in a cyclical pattern, social tension reinforces the departure from individuality at
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