Sociology is the study of human behavior in a social environment and how social interaction relates to development of mental and physical abilities, as well as future success and failure. Statistics are near irrelevant to sociology because it is a very intuitive field of study. So yes, sociology is much more than statistics.
managing and calculating statistics
Herman J. Loether has written: 'Inferential statistics for sociologists' -- subject(s): Sampling (Statistics), Sociology, Statistical hypothesis testing, Statistical methods 'Descriptive and inferential statistics' -- subject(s): Sampling (Statistics), Sociology, Statistical hypothesis testing, Statistical methods 'Descriptive statistics for sociologists' -- subject(s): Sociology, Statistical methods
In my opinion, sociology, since it involves less mathematics, statistics, and formal logic theory.
The importance of statistics in sociology are that they give a person tangible evidence to support theories. This evidence is then used to spot trends and predict the social development of many populated areas.
Sociology, pediatrics, psychology, social psychology, neurophysiology, statistics, proposition logic
An outlier (mathematics/statistics), or radical value (sociology).
Statistics and precalculus both require skills in algebra. The difference between basic statistics and precalculus is that, precalculus is more of advanced algebra. Statistics on the other hand is more computational stuff. If you are talking about basic statistics, i think it is easier than precalculus. But remember, statistics is more involved as it gets higher since it requires calculus or real analysis kind of thing, so it is difficult.
Formalistic school in sociology emphasizes the use of formal models, statistics, and quantitative methods to analyze social structures and phenomena. It focuses on identifying and measuring patterns, relationships, and laws that govern social behavior, often at the expense of considering social context or subjective experiences. This approach is often criticized for oversimplifying complex social realities and reducing human behavior to mathematical formulas.
Jay A. Weinstein has written: 'A collectors' guide to Judaica' -- subject(s): Judaica, Collectors and collecting 'Sociology/technology' -- subject(s): Technological innovations, Technology and civilization, Social change 'Social change' -- subject(s): Progress, Social change 'Applying social statistics' -- subject(s): Methodology, Sociology, Statistics methods 'Applying social statistics' -- subject(s): Sociology, Methodology, Statistics methods 'Social and Cultural Change' -- subject(s): Progress, Social change
Psychology, sociology, political science, biology, physics, religious studies....
It depends, you would have to look at statistics.
The similarities between sociology and economics include that both are studies of a group of people as a whole, as opposed to studying a single person. Both of these sciences are considered to be inexact because they deal more with statistics than actual facts. Another similarity is that economics and sociology can both predict what might happen with a group of individuals, but not a single individual.