Page:American Journal of Sociology Volume 1.djvu/498

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
486
THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY.

X. The Relation of Sociology to these Demands.

Comte: Philosophie Positive, Martineau's Tr., Vol. II. chaps, iii.–vi.

Ward: Dynamic Sociology, Vol. I. Introduction, pp. 27–31.

Contributions to Social Philosophy, Amer. Journal of Sociology, Vol. I., 1895–6.

Static and Dynamic Sociology, Political Science Quarterly, Vol. X., No. 2.

Giddings: The Theory of Sociology (Supplement to Am. Academy, May 1894).

DeGreef: Introduction à la Sociologie, Vol. I. Introduction.

De Lestrade: Elements de Sociologie, Paris, 1889, pp. 1–11.

Moses: Nature of Sociology, Journal of Political Economy, Dec, 1894.

Small: Sociology and Economics, Jour, of Pol. Econ., March 1895.

Static and Dynamic Sociology, Am. Jour, of Sociology, Sept. 1895.

Simmel: Problem of Sociology, Annals of Amer. Acad., Nov. 1895.

Powers: Terminology and the Sociological Conferences, Am. Acad. March 1895.

Mayo-Smith: Statistics and Sociology Chap. i.

Flamingo: Sociology in Italy, American Journal of Sociology, November, 1895.

Howerth: Present Condition of Sociology in the United States, Annals of American Academy, September, 1894.

1. The term "Sociologie" was first employed, as an equivalent of "social physics," by Comte in the fourth volume of his Philosophie Positive, published in 1839. Spencer adopted the term which has come into general but vague use. The word has been criticised as etymologically a hybrid, but it is defended on the following grounds:

a) There is need for a new term to which a precise meaning may in time be attached.

b) There is no Greek word for the essential component.

c) The words "social science" have been employed to include several "social sciences."

d) Sociology yields readily the adjective "sociological" and the noun "sociologist."

2. While technical terms have an important function, there is too often danger of laying stress upon words rather than upon the ideas which they are to connote. "Instead of discoursing