This document provides an introduction to social science, natural science, and the humanities. It defines social science as fields dealing with aspects of human group life and behavior. Natural science seeks to explain natural phenomena using empirical methods. The humanities study the human condition using analytical and critical methods. It discusses key thinkers in the development of social science like Comte, Martineau, Marx, Durkheim, and Weber. Society is defined as a group sharing culture in a territory with a unified identity, distinct from nature which follows patterns from the past.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
408 views
Introduction To Social Science
This document provides an introduction to social science, natural science, and the humanities. It defines social science as fields dealing with aspects of human group life and behavior. Natural science seeks to explain natural phenomena using empirical methods. The humanities study the human condition using analytical and critical methods. It discusses key thinkers in the development of social science like Comte, Martineau, Marx, Durkheim, and Weber. Society is defined as a group sharing culture in a territory with a unified identity, distinct from nature which follows patterns from the past.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18
Introduction to Social
Science Clara Easther C. Gayem Meaning of Social Science, Natural Science and Humanities 1. Social Science
Are the fields of human knowledge that
deals of the aspects of the group life of human beings.
The study of society and the manner in
which people behave and influence the world. 2. Natural Science A branch of science that seeks to elucidate the rules that govern the natural world by using the Empirical and Scientific method.
human condition, using methods that are primarily analytical, critical, or speculative.
It is a branch of knowledge that tends to
humanize human as they express themselves in various forms
• Ancient and Modern Languages
• Visual and Performing Arts • Literature, History, Philosophy and Religion • Society
A group of people who share a common
culture, occupy a particular territorial area and feel themselves to constitute a unified and distinct entity.
• Social Issue
Refers to the problems of a society
How is society different from nature? "Nature" conjures an image of random and unstructured forces that shape a given area. It usually follow a general pattern, law, or process ever since the world existed. These patterns and laws follow an amazing uniformity, which anable a researcher to trace back what happened in the past by looking at what is happening in the present. "Society," on the other hand, is a contrast to the preceding imagery of nature. Society is organized, deliberately structured and formalized, and bound by rules drafted and implemented by the people who themselves constitute society. • By the 19th century to early 20th century, different types of societies all over the world had been classified and categorized placing a Western (European and North American) urban and industrialized society in direct opposition to Non- Wstern, "PRIMITIVE" society.
• The word "Primitive" refers to everything
that contrast with the industrial, urbanized society. Ethnography
From the Greek word "ethnos" which
means a group of people, and the German word "graphien" which means description.
Ethnography is a detailed description of a
specific cultutal and social group that has become a central peice of the discipline of anthropology. The Historical Background of the Growth of Social Science • The development and progress of human knowledge, Social Science can be traced back to Greek Civilization.
Socrates Plato Aristotle
• Before the birth of modern social sciences in the West, the study of society, culture and politics were based on social and political philosophy. In return, social and political philosophies were informed by theological reasoning grounded in Revelation based on the holy bible. • Philosophy is district from Science. Science would not have a development if it remained under the wings of philosophy and theology. • Philosophy is based on analytic understanding of nature of truth about specific topics of issues. The Birth of Social Sciences as a response to the social turmoil of the MODERN PERIOD Auguste Comte Isidore Marie Auguste François Xavier Comte was a French philosopher and writer who formulated the doctrine of positivism. He is often regarded as the first philosopher of science in the modern sense of the term; Comte is also seen as the founder of the academic discipline of sociology.
Born: 19 January 1798, Montpellier, France
Died: 5 September 1857, Paris, France Harriet Martineau One of the earliest Western Sociologist, was a born in 1802 in Norwich, England. Martineau was a self-taught expert in political economic theory, and wrote prolifically about the relations between politics, economics, morals and social life throughout her career. Her intellectual work was centered by a staunchly moral perspective that stemmed from her Unitarian faith. She was fiercely critical of the inequality and injustice faced by girls and women, slaves, wage slaves and the working poor. Karl Marx Emile Durkleim Max Weber