The pure sociology perspective invented by Donald Black, a general theoretical framework for the prediction and explanation of social reality, has considerable potential for the scientific understanding of criminal behavior. Several scholars have profitably drawn upon Black's proposal that a significant amount of crime is a form of disputing or social control, especially to explain violent conflict. However, pure sociology has not yet been extended and applied to criminal behavior more broadly. A pure sociology of predatory behavior, for instance, would address the location and direction in social space of predators, prey, and third parties. In expanding criminological thought, however, pure sociology also challenges it. Pure sociology explanations are not restricted by time or place, a feature not easily realized with a concept so closely tied to a relatively recent social invention: the state. Additionally, the supra-psychological, -anthropocentric, and -teleological nature of pure sociology generates explanations of behavior that are at odds with many of the assumptions of traditional criminology. Ultimately, then, pure sociology yields a new paradigm for the explanation of behavior the state defines as criminal. Criminology has long been hospitable to a diversity of theoretical perspectives. Phenomenology, rational choice theory, Marxism, evolutionary psychology, and a clutch of social psychological explanations have all contributed to a significant growth in our understanding of criminal behavior. Yet gaps undoubtedly remain. A recent addition with much to offer the field is pure sociology. Pure sociology was invented by Donald Black in The Behavior of Law [8], elaborated by him in subsequent publications, and has been applied to a variety of subjects by scholars such as Baumgartner [3][4][5], Borg [21], Campbell [22], Hoffmann [41], Horwitz [42, 43], Phillips [54] (see also Phillips & Cooney [55]), Michalski [49, 50], Morrill [51], Mullis [52], Senechal de la Roche [58, 59], Tucker [67, 68], and myself [28,31]. Since pure sociology represents a new way of explaining social life its application to criminology is not wholly straightforward. The present analysis is divided into two halves, the first addressing how pure sociology differs from