Sociological theories direct sociologists in their learning of the development and structure of the society. A theory is a way of linking and connecting information together to understand a set of principles. Sociological theories help simplify reality and explain the behavior of the collective rather than the individual. For example, the conflict theory, functionalism, interactionist theory, and ethnomethodology were all created through the collection of data to comprehend social practices and the society in its entirety. To begin with, the conflict theory was founded by Karl Marx, a German philosopher, sociologist, revolutionist, and an economist, during the nineteenth century. The conflict theory proposes that societies are persistently in conflict and in rivalry for minimal resources. Conflict theorists believe in social change and focus on how differing social status create conflicts. The theory also entails the ideology that power is the basis of all social …show more content…
Internationalists examine the influences of human interaction and behavior on the society. The interactionist perspective referred to as symbolic interactionism was founded by George Herbert Mead. This perspective involves the gestures and symbols used while individuals interact with one another. In his ideology, Mead proposes that an individual’s identity is influenced and defined through social interactions. People’s sense of conformity and the need to take action in accordance to social standards is a requisite to human interactions due to human activities most often occurring in public places. Symbolic interactionists are concerned with how individuals interpret the world around them and how they conduct themselves. Certain critics to this theory claim that interactionists fail to consider the substantiality of components in a society, or in other words, look at the bigger