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  1. 2) About 5 percent of the population sees all individuals in society ranked being a status inconsistent can be sum-. claim to have seen a flying saucer. on a multidimensional set of criteria marized as follows: 3) About one-half of the population (2, 3). The Marxist view of a single 1) Lack of predictable behavioral re-.

  2. Status Inconsistency Theory and Flying Saucer Sightings: This sociological theory is further validated through analysis of a national survey of sighters. Donald I. Warren Authors Info & Affiliations. Science. 6 Nov 1970. Vol 170, Issue 3958. pp. 599 - 603. DOI: 10.1126/science.170.3958.599. Abstract. The analysis is completed.

  3. 6 de nov. de 1970 · Status inconsistency theory and flying saucer sightings. Science. 1970 Nov 6;170 (3958):599-603. doi: 10.1126/science.170.3958.599. Author. D I Warren. PMID: 5528429. DOI: 10.1126/science.170.3958.599. Abstract. The analysis is completed.

  4. Status Inconsistency Theory and Flying Saucer Sightings | Semantic Scholar. DOI: 10.1126/science.170.3958.599. Corpus ID: 26276101. Status Inconsistency Theory and Flying Saucer Sightings. D. Warren. Published in Science 6 November 1970. Physics, Sociology. The analysis is completed.

  5. One oft-cited sociological study is that of Donald I. Warren (1970), which resulted in the "status inconsistency theory of flying saucer sight ings."2 Warren's study links three variables: (1) a social condition of status discontinuity, producing (2) a psychological state of marginality, resulting

  6. 12 Mar 1971. Vol 171, Issue 3975. p. 957. DOI: 10.1126/science.171.3975.957.a. Formats available. You can view the full content in the following formats: VIEW PDF. Reference. Warren, D.I., Status Inconsistency Theory and Flying Saucer Sightings, Science 170: 599 (1970). Crossref. PubMed. ISI. Google Scholar. (0)eLetters.

  7. D.I. Warren, 'Status Inconsistency Theory and Flying Saucer Sightings', Science, Vol. 170 (6 November 1970), 599-603. 37. G.E. Lenski, 'Status Crystallization: A Non-Vertical Dimension of Social Status', American Sociological Review, Vol. 19 (1954), 405-13.