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Topic: Charles Cooley


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  Charles Cooley: biography and encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Charles Horton Cooley (1864-1929) was an American (A native or inhabitant of the United States) sociologist (A social scientist who studies the institutions and development of human society).
He received a BA (1887) and a PhD (1894) in economics (The branch of social science that deals with the production and distribution and consumption of goods and services and their management) from the University of Michigan (A university in Ann Arbor, Michigan).
In respect of how other people are the most influential in respect of building, changing or maintaining the self image, Cooley used the term the "looking glass self" to convey the idea that the self concept reflects the evaluations of other people.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/c/ch/charles_cooley.htm   (133 words)

  
 Charles Cooley - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Horton Cooley (1864-1929) was an American sociologist.
He received a BA (1887) and a PhD (1894) in economics from the University of Michigan.
Cooley's concept of the "looking glass self" expanded William James's idea of self to include the capacity of reflection on its own behavior.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Cooley   (141 words)

  
 Biography: Charles H. Cooley
Charles Horton Cooley was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1864 as the fourth of six children.
Charles Horton Cooley spent his childhood suffering from various ailments (some apparently psychosomatic) and was generally socially withdrawn.
Cooley sought to emphasize the interconnectedness of the dualism of society and the individual and felt the two could only be understood in relationship to each other.
sobek.colorado.edu /SOC/SI/si-cooley-bio.htm   (419 words)

  
 Charles H. Cooley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Cooley was strongly associated with the University of Chicago's school of Symbolic Interaction but was, in fact, a scholar at the University of Michigan.
Cooley postulated that the best way for a sociologist to examine the social world was by employing a method called "sympathetic introspection." Sympathetic introspection is a technique where the sociologist analyzes an actors' consciousness by putting themselves in the place of the actor.
Two of Cooley's most lasting contributions to the field of sociology and symbolic interaction are the concepts of the looking-glass self and the concept of primary groups.
sobek.colorado.edu /SOC/SI/si-cooley.htm   (410 words)

  
 Biographies of Sociologists - School of Sociology and Anthropology - University of Canterbury
Cooley was one of the first generation of American sociologists, but an eccentric who differed from most of his peers.
Cooley sought to abolish the dualisms of society/individual and body/mind, emphasizing instead their interconnections, and conceptualizing them as functional and organic wholes.
Cooley was both a student and professor at the University of Michigan.
www.soci.canterbury.ac.nz /resources/biograph/cooley.shtml   (328 words)

  
 Pastor Charles Cooley: Instrument in the Hands of God
According to Cooley, Braun was born in Soviet Latvia; he graduated from the University of Moscow and he was later exiled to Siberia.
Cooley said that when he went to see the harp maker, he found that the biblical instruments being produced are not accurate.
Cooley’s son, Stephen, the minister of music at Lawyer’s Road Baptist, is grateful to have a father and a pastor who spends so much time in God’s Word and prayer.
www.thecharlotteworld.com /fullarticle.asp?ID=189   (2247 words)

  
 Cooley - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dennis Cooley (born 1944), Canadian poet, professor at the University of Manitoba
Stephen Cooley (born 1947), American prosecutor for Los Angeles County.
Cattle Raid of Cooley, central tale in the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cooley   (222 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Charles Horton Cooley (Sociology, Biography) - Encyclopedia
of Michigan (B.A., 1887; Ph.D., 1894); son of Thomas M. Cooley.
He taught in the sociology department at the Univ. of Michigan after 1892, although his degree was in economics.
Cooley's major contribution to the field of sociology was his idea of the "looking-glass self" (a concept that emphasizes the social determination of the self) and primary groups : e.g., the family, the play group, or the neighborhood.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/C/Cooley-C.html   (225 words)

  
 Cooley - The Work - Looking Glass Self   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
"Self and society," wrote Cooley, "are twin-born." This emphasis on the organic link and the indissoluble connection between self and society is the theme of most of Cooley's writings and remains the crucial contribution he made to modern social psychology and sociology.
The objects of the social world, Cooley taught, are constitutive parts of the subject's mind and the self.
Cooley wished to remove the conceptual barrier that Cartesian thought had erected between the indi- vidual and his society and to stress, instead, their interpenetration.
www2.pfeiffer.edu /~lridener/DSS/Cooley/COOLWRK.HTML   (545 words)

  
 Guilford College - Faculty Members Martha Helms Cooley and Charles C. Almy Retiring with 69 Years of Service
Cooley, the college's Dana Professor of History, joined the faculty in 1965 and Almy, a professor of geology, arrived in 1972.
Cooley served as vice president and academic dean from 1995-2000, working full-time with the faculty, academic support administrators and their staff.
Cooley was president of the N.C. chapter of the American Association of University Professors in 1974-75.
www.guilford.edu /newsEvents/index.cfm?ID=600003390&print=yes   (578 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Cooley, the son of Michigan Supreme Court judge Thomas McIntyre Cooley, earned his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in 1894.
The Canadian statesman Charles Tupper was one of the Fathers of Confederation, who in 1867 united the separate provinces of British North America into the Dominion of Canada.
Usually known as the prince of Wales, Charles is also earl of Chester, duke of Cornwall, duke of Rothesay, earl of Carrick, and baron of Renfrew, among other titles.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9026130   (623 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley: Human Nature and the Social Order: Table of Contents   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Editors' Notes: Cooley's Human Nature and the Social Order is a landmark in the emergence of sociological social psychology.
Because of the work of the Social Darwinists and their perspective on biological determinacy, population control and eugenic manipulation of the human gene pool, Darwinian thought has had a "bad rep" in the social sciences.
Bad Darwinism deserves a bad rep. Cooley's perspective on Darwin, however, helps rehabilitate many of the key contributions of the evolutionary perspective, stating them in a way that will be acceptable to most social scientists.
spartan.ac.brocku.ca /~lward/Cooley/Cooley_1902/Cooley_1902toc.html   (432 words)

  
 UMass Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press
One of the founders of sociology in the United States, Charles Horton Cooley (1864–1929) is perhaps best known for his concepts of the looking-glass self and the primary group.
Characterizing Cooley as an “exceptional exceptionalist,” Jacobs shows how his unique adaptation of Adam Smith’s liberalism and his rejection of Herbert Spencer resulted in a notion of the social that set him apart from the burgeoning professional social science movements of his time.
In a chapter devoted to Cooley’s qualitative approach, Jacobs analyzes his vivid ethnographic observations of the Lower East Side Jewish ghetto and Hull House in Chicago, as well as his reflections on the death of his daughter and his own impending death in 1929.
www.umass.edu /umpress/fall_05/jacobs.html   (381 words)

  
 Bibliography of Charles Horton Cooley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Adapted from Charles Horton Cooley and the Social Self in American Thought.
"The Development of Sociology at Michigan" Pp 3-14 in Sociological Theory and Research, being selected papers of Charles Horton Cooley, edited by Robert Cooley Angell.
The text of the document presented here is in the public domain.
spartan.ac.brocku.ca /~lward/Cooley/cool_bib.html   (488 words)

  
 Table of contents for Charles Horton Cooley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Exceptional Exceptionalist: Cooley?s Rescue of Sociology from the Graveyard of European Liberalism 000 Chapter Two.
Cooley and the Essay Tradition, Part I : The Influences of Montaigne and Emerson 000 Chapter Five.
Cooley and the Essay Tradition, Part II: The Aesthetic Template Completed 000 Chapter Six.
www.loc.gov /catdir/toc/ecip0517/2005023232.html   (181 words)

  
 BE-ME: Education
Was an American social psychologist who believed that people develop their idea of self through the use of a social looking glass.
Cooley's theory states that this development of self involves three steps.
As you have just read, Jacqueline Michelle was faced with an ugly self image created in a "social mirror" constructed by her cruel parents.
www.be-me.org /learningpackages/package3/2.asp   (254 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley Quotes
6 Quotes for 'Charles Horton Cooley' in the Database.
One should never criticize his own work except in a fresh and hopeful mood.
All Quotes are provided for educational purposes only and contributed by users.
www.worldofquotes.com /author/Charles-Horton-Cooley/1   (206 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
This is a full text version of the revised edition of Cooley's book, Human Nature and the Social Order, originally published in 1922 by Charles Scribner's Sons.
Provides an excerpt from Cooley's book, Human Nature and the Social Order, published in 1902.
Contains information about Cooley's original ideas and works, including the Looking Glass Self and Primary Groups.
www.sullivan.edu /library/links/cooley_links.htm   (135 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley, 1899/1900, University of Michigan History
D., 1894), instructor of political economy, was named assistant professor of sociology and taught the university's first course in the subject in 1899.
Cooley, the son of famed Law School professor and State Supreme Court Justice Thomas McIntyre Cooley, would go on to become one of the seminal theorists in the young discipline.
His books on social organization and culture became classics and are still assigned in university courses.
www.umich.edu /~bhl/bhl/myumich/umhist/cooleych.htm   (98 words)

  
 Charles Horton Cooley - Compare Prices & Reviews at Smarter
Charles Horton Cooley - Compare Prices & Reviews at Smarter
Buy used, rare and out-of-print books by Charles Horton Cooley.
Get phone number, address, and much more on Charles Horton.
www.smarter.com /books-1/product/charles_horton_cooley-1884922   (140 words)

  
 Term Papers 2000, Term papers, 060111
This paper tackles the difficult task of assigning a general definition and meaning to the art of poetry.
It uses quotes from Aristotle, Plato, Pablo Neruda, Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Wordsworth and Charles Johnson.
The claims made by the poetry greats and the author are then supported by examples in classic poetry.
termpapers2000.com /lib/essay/Charles-Cooley-and-George-Herbert-Mead...   (3437 words)

  
 University of Michigan Library Name Resolver Service   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Title: Charles Horton Cooley and DePont's picnicing on North Lake
DePont; Charles H. Cooley; Small boy in rear probably Sid DePont; supplied; na6394
Subject: Cooley, Charles Horton, 1864-1929; Cooley family; Picnics--Michigan
name.umdl.umich.edu /IC-BHL-X-BL000114]BL000114   (115 words)

  
 LUBRIZOL FOAM CONTROL ADDITIVES INC Securities Registration Statement (simplified form) (S-3/A) LUBRIZOL INTERNATIONAL ...
*By: /s/ CHARLES P. COOLEY August 4, 2004 ----------------------------------------- Charles P. Cooley, Attorney-in-Fact for the Officers and Directors signing in the capacities indicated
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
*By: /s/ CHARLES P. COOLEY August 4, 2004 ------------------------------------------ Charles P. Cooley, Attorney-in-Fact for the Officers and Directors signing in the capacities indicated
sec.edgar-online.com /2004/08/04/0000950152-04-005873/section22.asp   (1699 words)

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