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Question
social institutions often appear monolithic and unchanging. but by employing the sociological perspective, we can understand that
social institutions are socially constructed and changeable.
some institutions like the family are relatively fixed, while others like government and education are changeable.
each institution must be understood on its own terms; no generalizations regarding social institutions are possible.
modern social institutions are socially constructed, but premodern institutions were unchanging.
The sociological perspective emphasizes that social institutions are created by society (socially constructed) and not fixed; they can change over time as society's values, norms, and needs shift. The first option aligns with this: social institutions are socially constructed and changeable. The second option incorrectly claims some institutions (like family) are fixed. The third option is wrong as sociological study does allow generalizations about social institutions. The fourth option is incorrect as premodern institutions were also socially constructed and changeable (e.g., family structures or governance in premodern societies changed over time).
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A. social institutions are socially constructed and changeable.