Are social and natural sciences connected?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the connection between social and natural sciences. Some argue that they are connected through the scientific method, while others believe that they are only similar in their use of rational inquiry. The use of mathematics and mathematical modeling is also mentioned as a common thread between the two fields. However, there is also disagreement on the level of connection between the two, with some arguing that they are completely separate and others acknowledging some overlap. Additionally, the topic of mental health and the overdiagnosis of disorders in the psychiatric industry is brought up, with one person sharing their personal experience with being misdiagnosed. Overall, the conversation shows a range of perspectives on the connection between social and natural sciences.
  • #1
truthmost.com
Are social and natural sciences connected?
I would answer yes definitely!
 
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  • #2
Well, natural sciences seek to darwinize culture, and social sciences use postmodernist thinking to turn natural sciences into a dogmatic belief system devoid of objectivity.

Nah, that sounds too pessimistic.
 
  • #3
truthmost.com said:
Are social and natural sciences connected?
I would answer yes definitely!
No. Why would you think that? Do you have some point to make?

I hate to quote wikipedia, but whatever, this doesn't matter.

Social Sciences is the field of sciences concerned with the studies of the social life of human groups and individuals, including economics, geography, history, political science, psychology, social studies, and sociology.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_sciences

In science, the term natural science refers to a rational approach to the study of the universe, which is understood as obeying rules or law of natural origin. The term natural science is also used to distinguish those fields that use the scientific method to study nature from the social sciences, which use the scientific method to study human behavior and society; and from the formal sciences, such as mathematics and logic, which use a different methodology.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_science
 
  • #4
Perhaps the "use the scientific method," is the only connection, or maybe it's the observers.
 
  • #5
Psychology uses the scientific method, so it is a science, although the predictive value of current theories is pretty limited. As far as I can tell political science and sociology don't generally use the scientific method, so I would say they are not.
 
  • #6
Natural sciences are not really sciences in the strict way of what science objectives are. (Read Karl popper). But humanities and sciences of course are connected.
 
  • #7
stingray78 said:
Natural sciences are not really sciences in the strict way of what science objectives are. (Read Karl popper).
I disagree. Science is the scientific method, so the natural sciences certainly qualify as sciences.
 
  • #8
[*] Astronuc's and related comments are most reasonable.

[*] Maybe cellular automata is possible but maybe remote relation.

[*] Mathematics and mathematical modeling occurs in both natural sciencs and social sciences.
 
  • #9
stingray78 said:
Natural sciences are not really sciences in the strict way of what science objectives are. (Read Karl popper). But humanities and sciences of course are connected.

Popper was a philosopher of science. His work concerns some kind of ideal science that doesn't really exist. Sure falsifiability is a pretty good criterion that we SHOULD follow in formulating hypotheses/theories but the fact is that real scientists just don't think like that.

We don't always set out to disprove our hypotheses. We usually hypothesize something because we actually think it's true. Also, lots of science doesn't even have an explicit hypothesis. Example: The human genome project had no hypothesis though it was certainly science.
 
  • #10
It depends on how far down the line you go. For instance, biology is what creates the brain that is examined in psychology as well as sociology. Likewise, chemistry and physics explain how this brain controls the body through the nervous system, muscular system, et cetera. In this way, natural and social sciences are connected. Likewise, if history is a social science, then the physics of the weather most definitely have an impact on the social world. For instance, the Kamikaze saved the Japanese and the weather stopped Spain from being able to invade Great Britain. I think the social sciences and the natural sciences are definitely connected!
 
  • #11
First of all, "connected"=?

I think that they are "similar", because both examine cause-effect relationships between different phenomena, using rational inquiry and the rules of logic.

If by "connected" you mean "often referring to one another" as physics is connected to chemistry, then I agree with Lanka. Social sciences are connected to natural sciences, particularly biology.
It is about saying "Napoleon Bonaparte's immune system was in the process of mobilizing itself around the battle of Borodino and this is why his leadership then was not as effective as it could have been and (arguably) this led the French Empire to its doom."
 
  • #12
No, absolutely not. I don't think that there is any point of reference linking the social and natural sciences. In fact, I regard the social sciences to be pseudosciences, as they tend to be based mostly on theory or generalizations. This is particularly the case with the psychiatric industry, in that they over diagnose people with psychological disorders just because they have one or two of the characteristics of that disorder. Either that, or they make the criteria for certain disorders deliberately ambiguous such that anyone can fit the disorder. Look at ADHD...I mean, who among you DOESN'T have things that distract you?? It can easily be said that all of us have a little of that, unless we're androids or something. But particularly the new epidemic which discourages me the most is the autism epidemic. I have a friend who was thought to be AS, but she honestly doesn't fit the mold at all. She is extremely social, and is incredibly athletic. I, too, was also misdiagnosed with it when I was 15, and I am positively the direct antithesis of AS. I am extremely social and very athletic as well. I'm also extremely perceptive when it comes to people - I can predict their ulterior motives and work out their intentions, and I know intimately what kind of a person they are. ANd I'm very good at predicting how a person would respond in a given situation. I'm also extremely good at reading facial expressions, to the point where I can literally read people's minds by their expressions. So I think in this case, it was a bad diagnosis. I will concede that I am very ADHD, am very hyperactive, and am rather disorganized. But that goes more along with ADHD than AS. However, I did develop slightly differently, and it takes me a little longer to learn new information, but when I get it...I become a master at it. However, these findings are consistent with ADHD as well. People with it tend to take longer to learn new things, and they tend to develop slightly differently. ANd there are certainly people with with ADHD who develop at different rates - all people do, really. Unless it's something pronounced, like not being able to talk until age four, or starting to learn how to ride a bike, but not being able to get it down by age 8 - now that's a significant sign of a developmental disability. ANd that's characteristic with autism. Anything else is just a slower learning style, and people can have that without having high-functioning autism and the like. The biggest flaw I find in the methodologies of the social science is their proclivity to make overgeneralizations. They seem to go by the modus that if it looks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck, it is a duck. And that just isn't true - not every characteristic attributed to ADHD or autism IS in fact ADHD/Autism. The social sciences make a fundamental error of attribution in equating individual differences in cognitive perception or behavior with a mental disorder, whilst ignoring the fact that we're all individuals, and we all have our own ways of doing certain things. They also fail to conceive of the fact that just because someone has characteristics of ADHD/autism, doesn't mean that they have ADHD/autism. Correlation does not imply causation. Some people outside of the autism spectrum have these characteristics. Therefore, the whole idea of ascribing paradigmatic constructs to account for individual's behavior is a fallacy laden with contradictions. The human mind is not simple enough to be dissected, analyzed, and circumscribed into precategorical domains of designation. Furthermore, the human mind is too fluid; we do not occupy a static position on a spectrum; we are constantly changing identities and perceptions to accommodate for changing conditions in our environment. Thus, adaptation is mandatory for the evolution of the human consciousness.
 
  • #13
They are connected, but the burden of evidence in social sciences such as political science, economics, or psychology is a lot lower than the burden of evidence in qualitative natural sciences such as biology and medicine, which are a lot lower than the burden of evidence in quantitative natural sciences such as physics and chemistry.

So, when you make an assertion backed up by evidence in a social science such as psychology or economics, one can assume that the rigor of the evidence and the reasoning used to support the conclusion is probably a lot lower than it would be in a natural science.
 
  • #14
vociferous said:
They are connected, but the burden of evidence in social sciences such as political science, economics, or psychology is a lot lower than the burden of evidence in qualitative natural sciences such as biology and medicine, which are a lot lower than the burden of evidence in quantitative natural sciences such as physics and chemistry.

So, when you make an assertion backed up by evidence in a social science such as psychology or economics, one can assume that the rigor of the evidence and the reasoning used to support the conclusion is probably a lot lower than it would be in a natural science.

I tend to disagree since neuroscience is now discovering how much the natural state of the brain determines social outcomes and visa versa.

Here are some people who are pursuing a similar study.

Richard Ashcroft
Professor of Bioethics, School of Law, Queen Mary, University of London
r.ashcroft@qmul.ac.uk

I am interested in the bioethical aspects of research in and applications of the neurosciences and psychiatry, and in particular at the analogies and disanalogies with genetics, issues in clinical trials, and the conceptual aspects of neuroscience explanations of behaviour. I was a participant in the UK MRC’s neuroethics workshop, and chaired the 2005 Wellcome Trust summer school on ELSI and the neurosciences.

Rachel Bell
PhD Student, BIOS, London School of Economics
r.s.bell@lse.ac.uk
www.brainselfsociety.com [Broken]
My research focuses on neuroscientific accounts of offending. Taking the case study of the British Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder (DSPD) programme, and using a combination of ethnographic, interview and documentary research methods I am investigating the ways in which neuroscientific thought may be interacting with this specific environment. I aim to outline the conditions of possibility for neuroscientific thought and action about offending, to describe the extent of its emergence in the DSPD context, and the mechanisms which have shaped its uptake and development.
My studentship is part of the three year ESRC funded Brain, Self and Society project, led by Nikolas Rose.

John Bone
Lecturer in Sociology
j.bone@abdn.ac.uk
http://www.abdn.ac.uk/socsci/staff/details.php?id=29 [Broken]

For a few years now I have been working on a theoretical framework that integrates social theory with an understanding of human beings informed by developments in neuroscience, emerging from the ‘decade of the brain’. The resulting model acknowledges that society, and the individuals who comprise it, are products of a dialectical process of ‘co-construction’ between brain and social experience. Thus, it is recognised that social processes (at both the micro and macro level) are mediated and ‘structured’ by the inherent cognitive and emotional capacities shared by all human beings, and that individual brain development is reciprocally responsive to ongoing social experience. The model proposes various ways in which key social phenomena can be more clearly understood by going beyond conventional social theory and adopting such a perspective. An outline, ‘The Social Map and the Problem of Order’, has been published in Theory and Science 6:1 (2005), while a revised version is applied to understanding issues of national and cultural identity in ‘The Social Map: Cohesion, Conflict & National Identity, published in Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 12:3-4 (2006). For anyone who might be interested both articles are available online.

http://www.neurosocieties.eu/members/socialStudiesOfNeuroscienceDirectory.htm [Broken]

Another direct link between social science and natural science can be found in the study of Nutrition and the fundamental influences it has on the social interactions of individuals and groups.
 
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  • #15
Moridin said:
Well, natural sciences seek to darwinize culture, and social sciences use postmodernist thinking to turn natural sciences into a dogmatic belief system devoid of objectivity.

Nah, that sounds too pessimistic.

Definitely, postmodernism is much more rampant in the humanities than in the social sciences.
 
  • #16
Evo said:
No. Why would you think that? Do you have some point to make?
I hate to quote wikipedia, but whatever, this doesn't matter.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_sciences
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_science

I don't care what Wikipedia says. The social sciences were born when philosophy when an empirical base was given to it from the natural sciences -- observation, statistics, experimentation, mathematical rigor (especially, in the case of economics), etc. So they are definitely related by birth. Since nature is considered female, some could argue that the natural sciences was the mother of the social sciences with philosophy as its father?

Even today, they continue to be related. Chaos theory sweeps through the natural sciences and immediately is applied to the social sciences. Network theory sweeps through physics and takes over social network theory in the social sciences. Systems theory swept through the natural sciences in the 1960's with cybernetics, and soon after, social scientists saw societies, economies, etc. as systems. Neuroscience took over the study of the brain, and psychologists and economists were swept along with it. Should I continue?

I think it would be better if the social sciences disconnected a bit from the natural sciences, and if some of the ideas from the social sciences flowed into the natural sciences. Ethnography is one idea that seems to be doing reverse pollination successfully in industrial research.
 
  • #17
DaleSpam said:
Psychology uses the scientific method, so it is a science, although the predictive value of current theories is pretty limited. As far as I can tell political science and sociology don't generally use the scientific method, so I would say they are not.

How rude! All social sciences use the scientific method, maybe economics less than sociology, political science, and sociology.

The difference is that while the natural sciences have forgotten about their roots in induction and focus solely on deduction now, the social sciences focus on both. It may be because the social sciences are younger and have yet to reach the same level of maturation, or it may just be a special need given that prediction in the social sciences will probably never achieve the same level of accuracy that the natural sciences has achieved.
 
  • #18
changeseeker said:
The difference is that while the natural sciences have forgotten about their roots in induction and focus solely on deduction now, the social sciences focus on both.



The natural sciences are, by definition inductive. The quantitative sciences rely heavily on mathematics, which is deductive, but theories and hypothesizes are not considered validated until an attempt at falsification is made (that is, they are tested).

The qualitative sciences rely less on mathematics, and the social sciences, other than economics, use little mathematics outside the realm of statistics.
 
  • #19
I think its very important that intellectuals push their ideologies as hard as they can push them.

In saying that, the world is a set of competing "ideologies" and while there is a diversity of opinion there will be a competition similar to Darwinian Selection which ultimately "culls" the obsessed politically correct "fools" from the system.
 
  • #20
BigFairy said:
I think its very important that intellectuals push their ideologies as hard as they can push them.

In saying that, the world is a set of competing "ideologies" and while there is a diversity of opinion there will be a competition similar to Darwinian Selection which ultimately "culls" the obsessed politically correct "fools" from the system.

What is an "obsessed politically correct fool"?
 

1. How are social and natural sciences connected?

The connection between social and natural sciences lies in the study of human behavior and its impact on the natural world. Social sciences, such as psychology and sociology, examine how humans interact with each other and society, while natural sciences, like biology and ecology, study the physical world and its processes. Both fields are essential in understanding the complex relationship between humans and the environment.

2. What is the importance of studying the connection between social and natural sciences?

Studying the connection between social and natural sciences allows us to have a more comprehensive understanding of the world around us. It helps us recognize the impact of human behavior on the environment and how changes in nature can affect society. This knowledge is crucial in addressing global issues, such as climate change and environmental degradation.

3. How do social and natural sciences overlap?

There is a significant overlap between social and natural sciences in the study of human-environment interactions. For example, in the field of environmental psychology, researchers use both social and natural science methods to understand how the environment influences human behavior and well-being. Additionally, topics such as sustainability and conservation require an interdisciplinary approach that combines both social and natural sciences.

4. What are some examples of social and natural science collaboration?

One example of collaboration between social and natural sciences is in the study of climate change. Social scientists examine the social, economic, and political factors that contribute to climate change and how it affects society. Natural scientists, on the other hand, study the physical processes of climate change and its impact on the environment. Together, they work towards finding solutions to mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate change.

5. How can understanding the connection between social and natural sciences benefit society?

Understanding the connection between social and natural sciences can benefit society in various ways. It can help us make more informed decisions about environmental policies and management strategies. It can also lead to the development of more sustainable practices and technologies that consider both human and environmental needs. Additionally, it can promote a better understanding of how human behavior and societal structures can contribute to or prevent environmental issues, leading to more effective solutions.

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