ROSS, EDWARD A.


Meaning of ROSS, EDWARD A. in English

born Dec. 12, 1866, Virden, Ill., U.S. died July 22, 1951, Madison, Wis. in full Edward Alsworth Ross a founder of sociology in the United States and one of the first sociologists to attempt to create a comprehensive sociological theory. Ross was also a prolific writer whose flair for popular presentation greatly stimulated interest in social science research. He was an advocate of melioristic sociology, that is, dedicated to the application of the discipline to the ends of social reform. He joined the faculty at Stanford University, California, in 1893 as professor of administration and finance but became more interested in sociology, which he believed should be an instrument of reform. His political views (he was an adherent of populism in U.S. politics) so antagonized Mrs. Leland Stanford, widow of the university's founder, that she procured his dismissal in 1900. He taught at the University of Wisconsin from 1906 until 1937. His best-known work, Social Control (1901), on the reasons for and the means of societal limitation of the individual, was long regarded as a classic. Another widely read book by Ross was Social Psychology (1908), one of the first American works written specifically on that discipline. Sin and Society (1907) was his argument in favour of sociological jurisprudence. His Principles of Sociology (1920) was for years a standard introductory textbook.

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