Social relation

Ancient works which include manuals of good practice in social relations include the text of Pseudo-Phocylides, 175–227, Josephus' polemical work Against Apion, 198–210, and the deutero-canonical Jewish Book of Sirach or Ecclesiasticus, 7:18–36.In linguistic and anthropological frameworks, this is reflected in a culture's kinship terminology, with the default mother-child relation emerging as part of the embryological process.According to Piotr Sztompka, forms of relation and interaction in sociology and anthropology may be described as follows: first and most basic are animal-like behaviors, i.e. various physical movements of the body.In sum, symbolic interactionists analyze how social life depends on the ways people define themselves and others.They study face-to-face interaction, examining how people make sense of life and how they determine their relationships.
social sciencesinterpersonal relationshipconspecificshuman behavioral ecologysocial structuresocial ecosystemsociologistsMax Webersocial actionCategorizingGemeinschaft and GesellschaftPseudo-PhocylidesJosephusAgainst ApionBook of Sirachaltricialkinship terminologyembryologicalPiotr Sztompkasociologyanthropologybehaviorsactionssocial behaviorssocial contactsface-to-face interactionBehaviorActionSocial behaviorSocial contactAffectional actionCommunicative actionDramaturgical actionInstrumental and value-rational actionInterdependenceRelations of productionSocial isolationSocial movementSocial multiplier effectSocial robotSymbolic interactionismTraditional actionBehavioral ecologyBehavioral sciencesEngaged theorySocial ecologySocial philosophySocial psychologyBibcodeCollins, J. J.Sztompka, PiotrActa SociologicaWeber, MaxW. G. RuncimanCambridge University Press