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Example sentences for "social science"

  • Even primary conditions of material well-being, if not reacted upon by social science or a movement of freethought, may in a comparatively advanced civilization promote religious degeneration.

  • Two men, whose names are known to all those who have laboured in philosophy or in social science, MM.

  • Alfred FouillĂ©e had just spoken of it in his Social Science.

  • If so, social science, the crown of human sciences, may some day give us, in its ultimate formula, the secret of universal life.

  • Religion is nowadays obliged to call in social science to aid it in its struggle against socialism.

  • Such, accordingly, has been the conception of social science by many of those who have endeavoured to render it positive, particularly by the school of Bentham.

  • Most of the conclusions of social science applicable to practical use are of this description.

  • Comte's system, but the parent of serious errors in his attempt to create a Social Science.

  • The Working People's Social Science Club" was organized at Hull-House in the spring of 1890 by an English workingman, and for seven years it held a weekly meeting.

  • It was possibly significant that all discussions in the department of social science had to be organized by partisans in separate groups.

  • The very committee itself on social science composed of Chicago citizens, of whom I was one, changed from week to week, as partisan members had their feelings hurt because their cause did not receive "due recognition.

  • Powers which to-day, on a prepared ground of ascertained science, might yield the greatest results, were wasted in a gigantic effort to build a social science out of the chaos of undeciphered antiquity, natural and human.

  • The primary function of social science is to interpret men's experience in passing from stage to stage in the evolution of human values.

  • Literature, art, and that vast diversity of topics which are loosely embraced under the general name of social science--upon all these he had something fresh to say, and he said it invariably with attractiveness and effect.

  • It adds nothing to human knowledge, it solves none of the problems of life, it touches none of the questions of social science, it is not a philosophical treatise, and it is not a dozen things that it might have been.

  • The old "falsisms" of empirical politics are repeated even by professed biologists when they enter on the field of social science.

  • Social science, the science of all that relates to the social condition, the relations and institutions which are involved in man's existence and his well- being as a member of an organized community; sociology.

  • Defn: That branch of philosophy which treats of the constitution, phenomena, and development of human society; social science.

  • Defn: Of or pertaining to sociology, or social science.

  • This is a question which has an interest not only for Russians, but for all students of social science, for it tends to throw light on the difficult subject as to how far institutions may be successfully transplanted to a foreign soil.

  • An institution which professes to solve satisfactorily the most difficult social problems of the future is not to be met with every day, even in Russia, which is specially rich in material for the student of social science.

  • The purely literary and historical questions which had hitherto engaged the attention of the reading public were thrown aside and forgotten, unless they could be made to illustrate some principle of political or social science.

  • As social science is the highest in the hierarchy of sciences, it could not develop until the two branches of knowledge which come next in the scale, biology and chemistry, assumed a scientific form.

  • Of or pertaining to sociology, or social science.

  • That branch of philosophy which treats of the constitution, phenomena, and development of human society; social science.

  • But Stammler rightly claims a definite and special subject for what ought to be called social science; that is definite social data.

  • He is justified in making this remark, and in attaching the greatest importance to it, if he regards and interprets those propositions as assertions of laws, as strict propositions of social science.

  • How can ethics ever be social science, since it is based on cases of conscience which evade all social rules?

  • How can pure economics or technology ever be social science, since those concepts are equally applicable to the isolated individual and to societies?

  • Footnote 17: For a detailed statement of Douglass's views, see the American Journal of Social Science, XI, pp.

  • It is an experiment, we frankly acknowledge that fact, a democratic experiment dependent on physical science, social science, and scientific education.

  • Readily accessible books and magazines together with club and forum lectures in cities, towns, and villages were rapidly educating the population in social science, and the result was a growing independent vote to make politicians despair.

  • The problem of social science, then, appears to be to organize human society on the principles and ideals of Christianity.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "social science" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    affectionate leave; half pint; high quality; social being; social classes; social condition; social duties; social group; social hygiene; social institution; social justice; social legislation; social morality; social order; social organisation; social progress; social psychology; social purity; social rank; social science; social security; social structure; social unit; social welfare; somebody ought; submit their