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AN INTRODUCTION TO
  SOCIAL SCIENCE



                     1
INTRODUCTION
 The scientific study of organized human groups is
  a relatively recent development, but a vast
  amount of information has been accumulated
  concerning the social life of human beings.

 This information has been used in building a
  system of knowledge (called social sciences) about
  the nature, growth and functioning of human
  societies.



                                                   2
 Scientific knowledge is a knowledge that
  has     been      systematically   gathered,
  classified, related and interpreted.




                                                 3
 Social science – is taught in diverse ways.

     some courses take a global perspective
     some an anthropological perspective
     some a psychological perspective
     some a sociological perspective, and
     some a historical perspective




                                                4
Definition

 Social Sciences are the fields of human
 knowledge that deal with all aspects of the
 group life of human beings.

 They are closely related to humanities (deals
 with literature, music, art, and philosophy)
 because both deal with humans and their
 culture.



                                                 5
 However, Social Sciences are most concerned
  with those basic elements of culture that
  determine the general patterns of human
  behavior.




                                                6
Components of Social Sciences:

Anthropology – is the study of relationship
  between biological traits and socially acquired
  characteristics. Sometimes called the study of
  human.

1. Physical anthropology
2. Cultural anthropology

                                                7
Sociology – is the systematic study of   relationship
among people. Sociologists assume that behavior is
influenced by people’s social, political, occupational
and intellectual groupings and by the particular
settings in which they find themselves atone time
or another.

3 major choices are:
         1. Functionalism
         2. Conflict
         3. Interactionalism

                                                     8
Geography – is the study of the natural environment
 and how it influence social and cultural
 development.

  Concerns of geography are:

     1. Ecology
     2. Climate
     3. Resources
     4. Accessibility
     5. Demography



                                                  9
 History – is the study of past events. It is a social
  science in the sense that it is a systematic attempt to
  learn about and verify past events and relate them to
  one another and to the present.

 The study of history involves:
 1. Identifying
 2. Classifying
 3. Arranging



                                                            10
 Economics – is the study of the ways in which men
  and women make a living, the most pressing problem
  most human beings face.

 Its subject matter is often summarized as:


 1. Production
 2. Distribution
 3. Consumption



                                                       11
 Some of the topics includes are:
 1. Supply and demand
 2. Monetary and fiscal policy
 3. Costs
 4. Inflation
 5. Unemployment


 Economics seeks to explain, guide and predict social
  arrangements by which we satisfy economic wants.



                                                         12
 Political Science – is the study of social arrangments
  to maintain peace and order within a given society.

 It deals with government, and its interest are:
 1. Politics
 2. Laws
 3. Adminsitration
 4.International Relations
 5. Theory of the nature and functions of the state



                                                       13
 Psychology – deals with the mind and personality of
  the individual. It is a social science because humans
  are social creatures. It focuses on the individual and
  physical processes such as:

 1. Biological structure
 2. Development and maturation




                                                       14
 To understand society is to learn not only the
  conditions that limit ourselves, but also the
  opportunities open to us for improving the
  human condition.




                                                   15
 The humanities deal special aspects of human culture
  and primarily concerned with our attempts to express
  spiritual and aesthetic values and discover the
  meaning of life.


 Whereas the social sciences study issues in a
  systematic, scientific way, the focus of the humanities
  is more on the emotions and feeling themselves than
  on the system employed to sharpen that focus.



                                                        16
 Increasing our knowledge of human society is as
  important as learning more about mathematics,
  physics, chemistry or engineering, for unless we can
  develop societies in which human beings can live
  happy, meaningful and satisfying lives (incomparable
  to benefits from learning how make better
  automobiles etc).

 Albert Einstein said that “Politics is more difficult
  than physics and the world is more likely to die from
  bad politics than from bad physics.


                                                      17
Major steps in Scientific Inquiry

 Observation: All scientific knowledge relates to
  the natural environment and all knowledge
  begins with facts gathered through careful
  observation.
 Formulation of problem:
 Collection and classification of more facts:
 Generalization:
 Formulation of the hypothesis:
 Testing the hypothesis:
 Retesting and reformulating the theory:
                                                     18
Approaches in Social Sciences

 Define the problem
 Review the literature review
 Develop a theoretical framework and formulate
  hypothesis
 Choose the research design
 Collect the necessary data
 Analyze the results
 Draw conclusion.



                                                  19
1. Define the Problem

  this one is probably the most important. If you
  have carefully defined your terms, you can save
  an enormous amount of energy. Put simply, if
  you do not know what you are doing, no matter
  how well you do it then everything is useless.




                                                    20
2. Literature Review

  knowledge of the relevant literature is essential
  because    it    provides    background,     suggests
  approaches, indicates what has already been covered
  and what hasn’t, and saves you from redoing what has
  already been done. It is a way of using other people’s
  observation.




                                                       21
3. Develop a Theoretical Framework

  make a statement predicting your results and
  them clarify what each of the terms in the
  statement means within the framework of your
  research.




                                                 22
4. Choose a research design

  pick a means of gathering data, a survey, an
  experiment,      an    observational   study,
  secondary materials or a combination. Weigh
  this choice carefully because your plan is the
  crux of your research process.



                                                   23
5. Collecting the necessary data

  Data are what one collects from careful observation.
  Your conclusion will be only as good as your data, so
  take great care in collecting and especially in
  recording your data. If you don’t document what you
  have done, youmight as well not have done it.




                                                      24
7. Drawing conclusions

  Now you can prepare a report, summarizing the steps
  you have followed and discussing what you have
  found. A good findings will relate your conclusions to
  the existing body of research, suggest where current
  assumptions may be modified because of nee
  evidence and possibly identify unanswered questions
  for further study.




                                                       25
6. Analyzing the results

   when all data are in classify facts, identify trends,
  recognize relationships and tabulate the information
  so that it can be accurately analyzed and interpreted.




                                                       26
Typical Method in Social Science

 The historical method relies heavily on a study of
  their (subjects) historical background. It traces the
  principal past developments that seem to have
  been directly significant in bringing a social
  situation about.

 The case method involves making a more detailed
  examination and analysis of a particular issue or
  problem situation.


                                                      27
 The comparative and cross-cultural methods
  was formerly often employed in the hope of
  discovering evolutionary sequence in the
  development of human institutions that is
  patterns of social development or progress
  that would be universal.




                                               28
Difference between Theories and
                 Concepts
 Concepts


   a generalized idea about people, objects or processes
  that are related to one another, an abstract ways of
  classifying things that are similar.

 They are ways of classifying things that are in the
  same categories


                                                       29
 Concepts


    are used to simply the way people think   and
    communicate.




                                                    30
 Concepts are used by social scientists to generalize
  about some aspects of human interaction.

 They are guidelines that direct the interpretation and
  analysis of reality.

 Concepts are the technical vocabulary of the social
  sciences, and they have precise meanings that may
  differ considerably from the generally understood
  versions.


                                                       31
 Theories


  - a set of principles or concepts and generalizations so
  arranged that they explain and predict possible
  relationships among phenomena.

 In social science, theories are formulation of
  principles of behavior through which scientists try to
  increase their knowledge of human interaction.




                                                         32
 Theories


    - founded on observation and analysis   using
    the vocabulary of concepts

    -intent to explain the connections  between
    and among occurrences in        human
    interaction.




                                                    33
- without theories the accumulation of knowledge would be
  impossible, just as the   formulation of      theories would
  be impossible       without concepts

- Always open to change and even to total rejection if new
  evidence is presented to challenge them.

- In scientific terminology, a theory carries much more weight
  because it is based on supporting evidence.




                                                             34
Theories of Social sciences

 The Theory of Evolution assumes that the
  changes in any society are uniform based on
  fixed rules.

 Idea of Evolution is often associated with
  great personalities like Charles Darwin,
  Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer and Karl
  Marx

                                                35
Theory of Evolution

 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution – is based on 5 key
  observation and inferences.

1. Species have great fertility. They make more
  offspring than can grow to adulthood.

2. Populations remain roughly the same size with
   modest fluctuations


                                                     36
3. Food resources are limited but are relatively
   constant most of the time.

4. In sexually reproducing species, generally no two
  individuals are identical. Variations is rampant.

5. Much of this variation is heritable.




                                                       37
 From this it may be inferred. In a world of
  stable populations where each individual
  must struggle to survive, those with the best
  characteristics will be more likely to survive,
  and those desirable traits will be passed to
  their offspring.

 These    advantageous are inherited by
  following generations, becoming dominant
  among population through time. This is
  natural selection.

                                                    38
Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

1. Variation           – There is a variation in every population
2. Competition         – Organisms compete for limited resources
3. Offspring           – organisms produce more offspring than can
                       survive
4. Genetics            - Organisms pass Genetic traits on to their
                       offspring
5. Natural Selection   – Those organisms with the most
                       beneficial traits are more likely to survive and
                       reproduce.


                                                                          39
AUGUST COMTE (1798-1857)

Suggested the idea that human thought are
divided to 3 categories:

i. Theology
 - whereby the thoughts are influenced by
   religion and supernatural beliefs.




                                            40
ii. Metaphysic
   -thoughts that are influenced by
     abstract idea which is gathered from
     incident and physical phenomenon.

iii. Positivism
   - man think by using scientific methods to
   explore the incidents and physical
   phenomenon around them.




                                                41
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)

   Assumed of the existence of equal evolutionary
    process between biological organisms and
    people

   His idea about the natural social evolution was
    influenced by Darwin’s idea of “Survival of the
    Fittest”



                                                  42
   The fittest will survive in the process while
    the weak will be eliminated naturally
    according to the law of nature

   Hence, his idea refuses the element of force
    in human social system




                                                    43
Lewis Henry Morgan (1818- 1881)

   popularized Cultural Evolution Theory

   Made assumptions that any society can be divided
    according to 3 levels of survival




                                                   44
 Savagery - society which lives as nomads and
  indulge in hunting and food gathering

 Barbarisme - society which lives on a particular
  place and plants for survival

 Civilization - society which lives on a particular
  place and starts to use technology




                                                   45
Karl Marx (1818-1883) &
Frederick Engels (1820-1895)

   Influenced by Morgan’s ideas but more focused
    on material changes aspect

   Evolution happens in the contacts of resource
    production and mode of production



                                                    46
CONCLUSION

 Man kind need to understand and observe
  the importance of social sciences

 Knowledge based society will be better
  equipped to socializing process

 A well balanced knowledge about social
 sciences will ensure the humans existence.

                                              47
 Have a nice day!




                     48

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An Introduction To Social Science

  • 1. AN INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL SCIENCE 1
  • 2. INTRODUCTION  The scientific study of organized human groups is a relatively recent development, but a vast amount of information has been accumulated concerning the social life of human beings.  This information has been used in building a system of knowledge (called social sciences) about the nature, growth and functioning of human societies. 2
  • 3.  Scientific knowledge is a knowledge that has been systematically gathered, classified, related and interpreted. 3
  • 4.  Social science – is taught in diverse ways. some courses take a global perspective some an anthropological perspective some a psychological perspective some a sociological perspective, and some a historical perspective 4
  • 5. Definition Social Sciences are the fields of human knowledge that deal with all aspects of the group life of human beings. They are closely related to humanities (deals with literature, music, art, and philosophy) because both deal with humans and their culture. 5
  • 6.  However, Social Sciences are most concerned with those basic elements of culture that determine the general patterns of human behavior. 6
  • 7. Components of Social Sciences: Anthropology – is the study of relationship between biological traits and socially acquired characteristics. Sometimes called the study of human. 1. Physical anthropology 2. Cultural anthropology 7
  • 8. Sociology – is the systematic study of relationship among people. Sociologists assume that behavior is influenced by people’s social, political, occupational and intellectual groupings and by the particular settings in which they find themselves atone time or another. 3 major choices are: 1. Functionalism 2. Conflict 3. Interactionalism 8
  • 9. Geography – is the study of the natural environment and how it influence social and cultural development. Concerns of geography are: 1. Ecology 2. Climate 3. Resources 4. Accessibility 5. Demography 9
  • 10.  History – is the study of past events. It is a social science in the sense that it is a systematic attempt to learn about and verify past events and relate them to one another and to the present.  The study of history involves:  1. Identifying  2. Classifying  3. Arranging 10
  • 11.  Economics – is the study of the ways in which men and women make a living, the most pressing problem most human beings face.  Its subject matter is often summarized as:  1. Production  2. Distribution  3. Consumption 11
  • 12.  Some of the topics includes are:  1. Supply and demand  2. Monetary and fiscal policy  3. Costs  4. Inflation  5. Unemployment  Economics seeks to explain, guide and predict social arrangements by which we satisfy economic wants. 12
  • 13.  Political Science – is the study of social arrangments to maintain peace and order within a given society.  It deals with government, and its interest are:  1. Politics  2. Laws  3. Adminsitration  4.International Relations  5. Theory of the nature and functions of the state 13
  • 14.  Psychology – deals with the mind and personality of the individual. It is a social science because humans are social creatures. It focuses on the individual and physical processes such as:  1. Biological structure  2. Development and maturation 14
  • 15.  To understand society is to learn not only the conditions that limit ourselves, but also the opportunities open to us for improving the human condition. 15
  • 16.  The humanities deal special aspects of human culture and primarily concerned with our attempts to express spiritual and aesthetic values and discover the meaning of life.  Whereas the social sciences study issues in a systematic, scientific way, the focus of the humanities is more on the emotions and feeling themselves than on the system employed to sharpen that focus. 16
  • 17.  Increasing our knowledge of human society is as important as learning more about mathematics, physics, chemistry or engineering, for unless we can develop societies in which human beings can live happy, meaningful and satisfying lives (incomparable to benefits from learning how make better automobiles etc).  Albert Einstein said that “Politics is more difficult than physics and the world is more likely to die from bad politics than from bad physics. 17
  • 18. Major steps in Scientific Inquiry  Observation: All scientific knowledge relates to the natural environment and all knowledge begins with facts gathered through careful observation.  Formulation of problem:  Collection and classification of more facts:  Generalization:  Formulation of the hypothesis:  Testing the hypothesis:  Retesting and reformulating the theory: 18
  • 19. Approaches in Social Sciences  Define the problem  Review the literature review  Develop a theoretical framework and formulate hypothesis  Choose the research design  Collect the necessary data  Analyze the results  Draw conclusion. 19
  • 20. 1. Define the Problem this one is probably the most important. If you have carefully defined your terms, you can save an enormous amount of energy. Put simply, if you do not know what you are doing, no matter how well you do it then everything is useless. 20
  • 21. 2. Literature Review knowledge of the relevant literature is essential because it provides background, suggests approaches, indicates what has already been covered and what hasn’t, and saves you from redoing what has already been done. It is a way of using other people’s observation. 21
  • 22. 3. Develop a Theoretical Framework make a statement predicting your results and them clarify what each of the terms in the statement means within the framework of your research. 22
  • 23. 4. Choose a research design pick a means of gathering data, a survey, an experiment, an observational study, secondary materials or a combination. Weigh this choice carefully because your plan is the crux of your research process. 23
  • 24. 5. Collecting the necessary data Data are what one collects from careful observation. Your conclusion will be only as good as your data, so take great care in collecting and especially in recording your data. If you don’t document what you have done, youmight as well not have done it. 24
  • 25. 7. Drawing conclusions Now you can prepare a report, summarizing the steps you have followed and discussing what you have found. A good findings will relate your conclusions to the existing body of research, suggest where current assumptions may be modified because of nee evidence and possibly identify unanswered questions for further study. 25
  • 26. 6. Analyzing the results when all data are in classify facts, identify trends, recognize relationships and tabulate the information so that it can be accurately analyzed and interpreted. 26
  • 27. Typical Method in Social Science  The historical method relies heavily on a study of their (subjects) historical background. It traces the principal past developments that seem to have been directly significant in bringing a social situation about.  The case method involves making a more detailed examination and analysis of a particular issue or problem situation. 27
  • 28.  The comparative and cross-cultural methods was formerly often employed in the hope of discovering evolutionary sequence in the development of human institutions that is patterns of social development or progress that would be universal. 28
  • 29. Difference between Theories and Concepts  Concepts a generalized idea about people, objects or processes that are related to one another, an abstract ways of classifying things that are similar.  They are ways of classifying things that are in the same categories 29
  • 30.  Concepts are used to simply the way people think and communicate. 30
  • 31.  Concepts are used by social scientists to generalize about some aspects of human interaction.  They are guidelines that direct the interpretation and analysis of reality.  Concepts are the technical vocabulary of the social sciences, and they have precise meanings that may differ considerably from the generally understood versions. 31
  • 32.  Theories - a set of principles or concepts and generalizations so arranged that they explain and predict possible relationships among phenomena.  In social science, theories are formulation of principles of behavior through which scientists try to increase their knowledge of human interaction. 32
  • 33.  Theories - founded on observation and analysis using the vocabulary of concepts -intent to explain the connections between and among occurrences in human interaction. 33
  • 34. - without theories the accumulation of knowledge would be impossible, just as the formulation of theories would be impossible without concepts - Always open to change and even to total rejection if new evidence is presented to challenge them. - In scientific terminology, a theory carries much more weight because it is based on supporting evidence. 34
  • 35. Theories of Social sciences  The Theory of Evolution assumes that the changes in any society are uniform based on fixed rules.  Idea of Evolution is often associated with great personalities like Charles Darwin, Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer and Karl Marx 35
  • 36. Theory of Evolution  Darwin’s Theory of Evolution – is based on 5 key observation and inferences. 1. Species have great fertility. They make more offspring than can grow to adulthood. 2. Populations remain roughly the same size with modest fluctuations 36
  • 37. 3. Food resources are limited but are relatively constant most of the time. 4. In sexually reproducing species, generally no two individuals are identical. Variations is rampant. 5. Much of this variation is heritable. 37
  • 38.  From this it may be inferred. In a world of stable populations where each individual must struggle to survive, those with the best characteristics will be more likely to survive, and those desirable traits will be passed to their offspring.  These advantageous are inherited by following generations, becoming dominant among population through time. This is natural selection. 38
  • 39. Darwin’s Theory of Evolution 1. Variation – There is a variation in every population 2. Competition – Organisms compete for limited resources 3. Offspring – organisms produce more offspring than can survive 4. Genetics - Organisms pass Genetic traits on to their offspring 5. Natural Selection – Those organisms with the most beneficial traits are more likely to survive and reproduce. 39
  • 40. AUGUST COMTE (1798-1857) Suggested the idea that human thought are divided to 3 categories: i. Theology - whereby the thoughts are influenced by religion and supernatural beliefs. 40
  • 41. ii. Metaphysic -thoughts that are influenced by abstract idea which is gathered from incident and physical phenomenon. iii. Positivism - man think by using scientific methods to explore the incidents and physical phenomenon around them. 41
  • 42. Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)  Assumed of the existence of equal evolutionary process between biological organisms and people  His idea about the natural social evolution was influenced by Darwin’s idea of “Survival of the Fittest” 42
  • 43. The fittest will survive in the process while the weak will be eliminated naturally according to the law of nature  Hence, his idea refuses the element of force in human social system 43
  • 44. Lewis Henry Morgan (1818- 1881)  popularized Cultural Evolution Theory  Made assumptions that any society can be divided according to 3 levels of survival 44
  • 45.  Savagery - society which lives as nomads and indulge in hunting and food gathering  Barbarisme - society which lives on a particular place and plants for survival  Civilization - society which lives on a particular place and starts to use technology 45
  • 46. Karl Marx (1818-1883) & Frederick Engels (1820-1895)  Influenced by Morgan’s ideas but more focused on material changes aspect  Evolution happens in the contacts of resource production and mode of production 46
  • 47. CONCLUSION  Man kind need to understand and observe the importance of social sciences  Knowledge based society will be better equipped to socializing process  A well balanced knowledge about social sciences will ensure the humans existence. 47
  • 48.  Have a nice day! 48