Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Aug 13, 2024 · Charles Horton Cooley was an American sociologist who employed a sociopsychological approach to the understanding of society. Cooley, the son of Michigan Supreme Court judge Thomas McIntyre Cooley, earned his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in 1894.

  2. Sep 22, 2023 · The looking-glass self, first coined by Charles Cooley, describes how one’s self or social identity is dependent on one’s appearance to others. This initial theory was based on Cooley’s observations of childhood social development.

  3. Charles Horton Cooley (August 17, 1864 – May 7, 1929) was an American sociologist. [1] He was the son of Michigan Supreme Court Judge Thomas M. Cooley. He studied and went on to teach economics and sociology at the University of Michigan.

  4. Jan 18, 2005 · Charles Horton Cooley. August 17, 1864 – May 7, 1929. “There is nothing less to our credit than our neglect of the foreigner and his children, unless it be the arrogance most of us betray when we set out to ‘Americanize’ him.” –Charles Horton Cooley.

  5. Charles Horton Cooley was an American sociologist who is best known for his concept of the 'looking-glass self,' which explains how an individual's self-concept is formed through their perceptions of how others view them.

  6. Mar 3, 2019 · Charles Horton Cooley was a sociologist known for developing the concepts of 'The Looking Glass Self' and of primary and secondary relationships.

  7. May 23, 2018 · The American social psychologist, sociologist, and educator Charles Horton Cooley (1864-1929) showed that personality emerges from social influences and that the individual and the group are complementary aspects of human association.

  8. Feb 6, 2017 · After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1887, Charles Horton Cooley earned a master’s degree in economics at U-M and started working at the Interstate Commerce Commission. Henry Carter Adams later hired Cooley to be an instructor in U-M’s economics department.

  9. There is, then, no mystery about social consciousness. The view that there is something recondite about it, and that it must be dug for with metaphysics and drawn forth from the depths of speculation, springs from a failure to grasp adequately the social nature of all higher consciousness.

  10. Abstract. Cooley valued sociology as a means for interpreting life and understanding human nature, and he sought his materials in the great literature perhaps more than in sociological texts. Social Phenomena are conceived as integrated wholes; the social process as a functional unity.

  1. People also search for