Are Social Sciences Inevitably Pseudo-Sciences?
Social science is a science unlike natural science. There are no constant variables and no way to conduct the experiments with accuracy. To some extent social science may even be considered a pseudo-science. With no specific grounds to base the theory on, social science is difficult to conduct experiments for. The changing environment and having interaction with the subjects can always lead to a different result each time. (more content follows the advertisement below) A D V E R T I S E M E N T GA_googleFillSlot(“OneStopIAS-MiddleBanner”); The scientists of social science believe that underneath our uniqueness and individuality there is a constant pattern of human behaviour. We see this in everyday life, probably without even noticing it. In general we tend to treat men and women differently according to gender, although this may seem discriminating it is the truth. If it is possible to study other living organisms as a whole, then why shouldnt we be able to do so with humans? Accordin
Related Questions
- Is it fair to say that, as a human, you enjoy the chaos and beauty of wilderness and nature, but not enough to prefer it over right angles, sterilized order, pathological security and rigorous predictability?
- Why not download Quran and Bible then burn the hard copy?
- Why is racism mailny directed on muslims?