Page:American Journal of Sociology Volume 1.djvu/832

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8i6

INDEX

Sayward, William H., 391

Scnafer, Pastor T., 583, 674

SchaffhauscD, 338

Schaffle, A., iii, 444, 479, 480, 795, 796

Schiattarella, 345

Schiller, 585, 586

Schleicnnachcr, 678

Schloss.D. F.,688

Schlosscr, 343

Schmidt, 463

Schmoller, G., 675

Schopenhauer, 533

Schubert-Soldcrn, Von, 649, 794

Schult2c-Delitzsch, 64Q

Schwegler. 474

Science, how it difiers from art. 146 ; development of, 438; classification of, 17; character and points of superiority in Comtc's classification, 16 ;

  • • hierarchy" not proper term for Comtc's classi-

fication, s6 ; work of the dilYerent sciences, 107 ; philosophy in all, 738

Seaton^ 262

Sedgwick, 754

Seneca, 301

ScFBi. 349. 350. 803

Sex, influence of, 445; influence of disproportion of sexes, ^35; average disproportion, 735-739; disproportion by races, y 27 ; disproportion by states, 730 ; disproportion in urban and rural popu- lations^ 731, 733; disproportion in state of Maine, 736 ; disproportion not entirely due to immigra- tion, 728, 739, 735, 736

Seybert, Adam, 373

Shakespeare, 114

Shaler, 313

Shaw. Albert, 688, 689

Siciliani, Pietro, 337

Sighcle, 350

Simcox, E. J., 504-507 bk.

Simmel, 440, 447, 486, 487

Slums, report of Department of Labor on, 373

Small, A. W., 1-15 ar.^ 17, 79-103 dr., 195-309 ar.^ 318-319 '"^■t 2I9-228 rv., 376-289 ar., 398- 4ioar.,474, 479,482, 486, 489, 493-494 rr., 494- 496 rz/., 562-582 ar.^ 789-790 rv.

Smith, Adam, 152, 475, 483

Smith, H. B. too

Smithsokian iNSTmmoN, publications of, 269; value of its ethnological publications

Social Consciousness, undisciplined, the chief mental trait of the age, 3

Social Control, Sact'al Contro/y^iys-^^ar-., 753- 767 ar. ; distinguish from social influence, social ascendency and social coordination, 519; main- tenance of social control, 519, 530; and altruism, 520; belongs to statical sociology, 521 ; work of, 523 ; and 'tympathy, 534 ; support of the social edifice, 537; its direction, 527; verification of theory by examination of codes, 539; and ethics, 530; direct control bylaw, 753-757; socialpun- ishments attendant upon legal, 757 759; action of public opinion, 759-764; influence of leading minds, 765 ; public opinion vs. legal control, 765 ; force of public opinion hindered, 768 ; fear of dispioval vs. hope of approval, 769

Social Evolution, A/r. A tdifs Social Evolution, 399-313 ar. ; Note »n the Term Social Evolu- tion, 596-603 ar. ; meaning of term, 596 ; man of the present compared with man in early his- tory, 596-602; complexity of society not a sign of high civilization, 597; moral facts as valu- able evidence as biological, 598, 601; influence of church in the middle ages, 598; social ills economic, 599 ; society a preserver of man's higher nature, not the creator, 601 ; not all pro- gress due to social evolution, 650; Vico and modern theorists on, compared, 79^

SociAUSH, Shortsightedness of socialists, 64; so-

cialism a check to progress, 300; rationality of, 300; is equalization of opportunity, 308 ; views on marriage, 308; confuseo with sociology, 344; repudiated by Spencer, 344; socialism and cnme, 344; inefficiency of, 645; in France, 645; moral aspect of, 795 ; and the agrarian question, 799

Social Organism, see Sociology.

Social Philosophy, demand for authentic, 6; re- quired more painstaking investigation, 7

Social Problem, nature of, 234, 383; the social question in the Catholic Congresses, 648

Social Sciences, Present state of, 8

SocienEs: American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 348 American Historical Assoc, 374 American Philosophical Society, 248 Amer. Society of Mechanical Engineers, 688 Baptist Congress, 231 Central Relief Association, 86, 96 Chicago Relief and Aid Society, 86 Children's Aid Society (Pennsylvania) Christian Citizenship League, 333 Christian Endeavor Society, 333 Christian Social Union, 50 Civic Federation of Chicago, 79-103 ar. Civil Service Reform League, 89 Congress of Industrial Conciliation and Arbitra- tion, 391, 709 Evangelical Alliance for the United States, 170-

181 ar., 68^ Industrial Union of Employers and Employed,

Institute Internationale de Sociologie, 146

International Congress of Profit Sharing, 686

International Prison Congress, 265

International Statistical Congress, 265

Kniphts of Labor, 339

Midland Institute, 333

Monatsschrift fiir Diakonie und Innere Mission,

583 National Association of Builders, 391 National Bureau of Reforms, 510 National Conference of Charities and Correc*

tions, 684 National Divorce Reform League, 643 Municipal Order League, 89 National Prison Congress, 290 National Tariff League, 164, New York Reform Club, 164 Pans Society of Political Economy, 146 School of Economics and Political Science, 331 St. Vincent de Paul Society, 86 United Hebrew Oiarities,86 Young Mens' Christian Association, 333 (For societies antecedent to the German Inner

Mission see 588-594, 677-679; for publications

of U. S. Department of State on international

societies see 265) Society, change in the social order, 212, 324 r., 278, 280, 397, 410, 537, 567; two principles of equitable social order, 376, 383; vulnerable point in our present, 380; fundamental assumption of, 383 ; presumption as to social order, 386 ; cause of changes in social order, 305; quantitative vs. qualitative progress, 309; is at base individual. 351 ; benevolent despotism, 402 ; next improve- ment in, 406 ; popular movements and upheavals, t'Cmperameutal, not intellectual, 443 ; beginning of, 451; cause of long lived societies, 506; cri- terion of, 518; conditions of permanency, 528; change in men's wants, 565 ; need of mutuality* 571; moral progress due to science, 627; con* temporaneous with art, 630; causal relations in, 652 Sociology, articles and reviews on : The era of Sociology^ 1-15 ar.; Thf Place of Sociolcgy among the Sciences, 16-37 ar.; Sociology and Cosmology, 132-157 ar,; Sociology and Politt-