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Definition of social studies

: a part of a school or college curriculum concerned with the study of social relationships and the
functioning of society and usually made up of courses in history, government, economics, civics,
sociology, geography, and anthropology

What are the Differences between social studies


and social science?
6 Answers

Neil Jamieson-Williams, Community College Professor (2002-present)


Answered Jan 4 · Author has 275 answers and 113.1k answer views
The social sciences are scientific disciplines that whose subject matter involves human
beings and human activity. Often denigrated by the natural sciences (especially physics and
chemistry) as the social sciences have yet to develop “law-like” theoretical models. Of
course, our subjects are more difficult: the speed of light does not change because the
photons are in a good mood, nor do chemical reactions fail to occur because the molecules
are depressed. The social sciences are: Anthropology, Political Science, Psychology, and
Sociology. Additional social sciences, depending on how the discipline is practiced, are
History and Geography. The other social science — one that is held in high esteem — is
economics; unfortunately this is the least scientific of the social sciences and the only
science that I know of that regularly discards data when it does not support established
theory (every other science keeps the data and begins to question the established theory).

Social Studies (like Cultural Studies) is a melange drawn from the social sciences and the
humanities (Philosophy, Literature, Religious Studies, etc.) that has more of a Humanities
emphasis. The discipline of Social Studies may examine similar topic areas to, say Sociology,
but the approach will be more philosophical than it is scientific.

9k Views · View Upvoters

Moshmi, English Faculty (2017-present)


Answered Mar 2 2017
Social studies has a combination of subjects in it like civics, geography, sociology,
economics, history, etc.

Social science is more stream oriented. It's the science of the society; the in depth
knowledge and systematic study of each branch of social transaction. It is empirical and
based on various scientific methods of deduction to arrive at a conclusion based on facts.

Let's say, if you are studying economics under social sciences you will need to concentrate
on the production and distribution part of the social transaction.

Social sciences are taught under a higher studies curriculum whereas, social studies is
school based subject.
About this course

Skip Course Description

This philosophy course has two goals. The first goal is to introduce you to the things that philosophers
think about. We will look at some perennial philosophical problems:

 Is there a God?

 What is knowledge, and how do we get it?

 What is the place of our consciousness in the physical world?

 Do we have free will?

 How do we persist over time, as our bodily and psychological traits change?

The second goal is to get you thinking philosophically yourself. This will help you develop your critical
reasoning and argumentative skills more generally. Along the way we will draw from late, great classical
authors and influential contemporary figures.

To help enhance your learning experience, this course offers instructor grading. If you choose to pursue
a verified certificate, a professional philosopher will carefully read, grade and comment upon your work.
Though all residential philosophy courses at MIT, and other major universities, offer instructor grading,
this is an innovation in the world of MOOCs. Students will test their ideas against, and receive individual
advice from, professional philosophers. We believe that this is the best way to learn philosophy.

Verified learners will be eligible for the MITx Philosophy Award and (for students presently in high
school) the MITx High School Philosophy Award. The awards will be given for outstanding written work
by the MIT Philosophy Department. In addition, award winners will be profiled on the MIT Philosophy
website. Please see the FAQ section below for the link to more information on the MITx Philosophy
Award.

NOTE: Enrollment for instructor grading will be capped.

What you'll learn

 How to construct and analyze philosophical arguments

 How to write clearly and communicate complicated ideas effectively

 Arguments for and against the existence of God

 The distinction between epistemic and practical rationality

 Theories of Knowledge

 Physicalist and Non-Physicalist theories of consciousness

 Free Will and Determinism

 Personal Identity

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