Webster's Dictionary defines sociology very simply: the study of society and the development of .
            
  To describe it in a little more detail, and with less vagueness, sociology can be .
            
explained as a scientific study of human social relationships.  There are several other branches of the .
            
social sciences that are also effected by sociology - they include economics, anthropology, psychology .
            
and political science.  All of these subjects fall within the realm of societies.  Sociologists study closely .
            
the ways in which different institutions and structures such as your family, your wealth (or lack of it), .
            
your community and your general surroundings influence your society.  Social problems such as .
            
poverty, crime, and abuse also come under sociology and also help shape society.
            
	The most basic concept in sociology is the way people interact with each other.  These .
            
interactions are the basic level of communication between people in realtionships, no matter how minor .
            
the relationship is.  Sociologists can generally be put into two different categories depending on what .
            
they tend to study.  Those who examine social patterns and trends locally, nationally or globally are .
            
called macrosociologists while those who tend to examine the more tedious of interactions that occur .
            
daily between people and communities are called microsociologists.
            
	While the ideas of sociology were first introduced in the seventeenth century during the .
            
Enlightenment, it was not until French philosopher named Auguste Comte came along that the official .
            
term sociology was coined.  He used it to define his vision of a new science that would help discover .
            
laws of human society that ran parallel to those of the laws of nature.  He wanted to use factual .
            
investigation, which was proving to be very successful in the physical sciences.  .
            
	.
            
	The most influential and important person in the history of sociology was Karl Marx, who is also .