Student100
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Ryan_m_b said:As a general note there have been posts in this thread disparaging the social sciences, and even medicine, as not science. I'm a little surprised and quite dismayed at that. If scientists disparage each other's fields without acknowledging how scientific theory is being applied what hope does the layman have of figuring out what is legitimate?
I made a (perhaps the) post to that effect. The fact that they're not a science shouldn't be taken as disparaging. Engineering is not a science, but it has worth. Neither is history, but it too has worth. Certain fields in medicine are more akin to engineering and the use of "best practices." Sometimes it jumps the gun: for example the Zika scare, there was/is no good evidence that it causes birth defects, but "scientists" at the CDC would disagree: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2016/s0413-zika-microcephaly.html
Medical science also generally suffers because it is neither space nor time invariant. One population's outcomes are not necessarily readily applicable to another different population. HIV causes AIDS, except when it doesn't; such as, in populations with CCR5 mutations or those able to effectively create broadly neutralizing antibodies that stabilize viremia counts. Nor is it time invariant, given sufficient time of co-evolution, HIV would no more cause AIDS then any of the other retroviruses we've found in our DNA.
Social science suffers from the same problems, but to an even greater extent. A study of one population has no bearing on another. The time scales that the "knowledge" of one study is applicable is appreciably short, at least when compared to even medical science. I also believe many social scientist take offense when you call them "not a science" because they depend on an argumentum ad verecundiam to give their studies weight.
Social science also has a greater capacity to influence policy and human life, partly because it invokes the authority of "science". Look at lie detectors? How many people lost jobs or ended up in prison due to pseudoscience? How long before we have fMRI "lie detectors"? fMRI's can tell you one thing, blood oxygen levels in various parts of the brain, but there is all sorts of nonsense out there that extrapolates this to mean something it can never actually tell you. Is there any actual science in the social sciences?