nihilistic
Intergalatic Delivery Boy
a/b) Ok, I´ll try. None of my Profs ever used Tabula Rasa as a foundation for analysis and I would not do so as well. Tabula Rasa, while certainly being proposed by some sociologists, can not be considered mainstram (anymore!). "Classic" social research did refer to this term until the ~70s but it was shown to provide rather inaccurate results, especially when applied to cultural and symbolic phenomena. Current (european, I don´t really know how it´s in the US, for example) theories do try to implement the factors you mentioned by taking predispositional factors into account. Norbert Elias, in his book "The Civilizing Process", is a very good example for an interdisciplinary approach, which is sometimes called "sociogenetic" and there he tries to include psychological and biological predispositions into his procedural sociology. The problem which arises of course is the problem of quantification. How do we include biological/genetic predispositions into a good calculation of how likely this person will be jobless for a long time or live in a suburb? This, for example, is one of the fields where a lot of theory building and -verification is taking place currently. I can´t really answer your question, though, because it aimed at Tabula Rasa being a centerpiece of sociology, which it, IMHO, isn´t. But I honestly can´t think of any findings from the fields of psychology, biology or genetics that openly contradict sociological theory at the moment.
Hmm ... so I was several decades off in my critism. Sorry about that. But if you would indulge me I could probably explain where my apparent wrongful assessment came from: Whenever I read something about sociology (granted that I do not actually real journals on current sociology research), it always seems to present the picture of tabula rasa, of the human mind as a blank sheet of white paper colored onto only by society. Granted that the mainstream coverage of all sciences are pathetic, but at least most other sciences actually make some noise. Biologists are currently the loudest because the effrontery (creationism) against them is by far the biggest and most strident. Astrophysicists would debunk astrologers. Pharmacologists have their arch-enemy in homeopaths. Mathematicians laugh at numerologists and sigh at gamblers. I could be very wrong about this, but I ask what efforts have sociologists made at debunking misconceptions about the results of their pursuits?
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. But this is of course the situation of other disciplines as well. And sociologists seem to be (ironically) not very good at communicating their results.
. That would require a very deep sociological analysis