Real Clear Politics   /   Real Clear  Science
 
 
Are There 'Laws' in Social Science?
Posted by _Ross  Pomeroy_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/ross_pomeroy/)  January 16, 2014


Richard Feynman rarely shied away from debate. When asked for his opinions, 
 he gave them, honestly and openly. In 1981, _he put forth this  one_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaO69CF5mbY) : 
"Social science is an example of a science which is not a science... They  
follow the forms... but they don't get any laws." 
"They haven't got anywhere yet," Feynman furthered. But never one to rule 
out  being wrong, he added with a grin, "Maybe someday they will." 
Many modern social scientists will certainly say they've gotten somewhere.  
They can point to the law of supply and demand or Zipf's law for  
proof-at-first-glance -- they have the word "law" in their title! The law of 
_supply 
and  demand_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_and_demand) , of course, 
states that the market price for a certain good will  fluctuate based upon 
the quantity demanded by consumers and the quantity  supplied by producers. 
_Zipf's law_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf's_law)  statistically models 
the frequency of words uttered  in a given natural language. 
But are social science "laws" really laws? A scientific law is "a statement 
 based on repeated experimental observations that describes some aspect of 
the  world. A scientific law always applies under the same conditions, and 
implies  that there is a causal relationship involving its elements." The 
_natural and  physical sciences are rife with laws_ (http://en.wikipedi
a.org/wiki/Laws_of_science) . It is, for example, a law that  non-linked genes 
assort independently, or that the total energy of an isolated  system is 
conserved. 
But what about the poster child of social science laws: supply and demand?  
Let's take it apart. Does it imply a causal relationship? Yes, argues _MIT 
professor  Harold Kincaid_ (http://mitpress.mit.edu/authors/harold-kincaid) 
. 
"A demand or supply curve graphs how much individuals are willing to 
produce  or buy at any given price. When there is a shift in price, that causes 
 
corresponding changes in the amount produced and purchased. A shift in the  
supply or demand curve is a second causal process – when it gets cheaper to  
produce some commodity, for example, the amount supplied for each given 
price  may increase." 
Are there repeated experimental observations for it? _Yes, again, says 
Kincaid_ 
(http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CDUQFjAB&url=http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~bwrobert/teaching/einstein/pdf/Hitchcock-8
.pdf&ei=uIHXUoDxLOmqsQSb24GwBQ&usg=AFQjCNEyWTerjiQWAiQK5XgNS6WEHVM_0A&sig2=w
C-QkeI0l0DtsSDiDolwig&bvm=bv.59568121,d.cWc&cad=rja)  (PDF). 
"The observational evidence comes from many studies of diverse commodities –
  ranging from agricultural goods to education to managerial reputations – 
in  different countries over the past 75 years. Changes in price, demand, 
and supply  are followed over time. Study after study finds the proposed 
connections." 
Does supply and demand occur under the same conditions? That is difficult 
to  discern. In the real world, unseen factors lurk behind every observation. 
 Economists can do their best to control variables, but how can we know if 
the  conditions are precisely identical? 
Still, supply and demand holds up very well. Has Mr. Feynman been proved  
wrong? Perhaps. And if social science can produce laws, is it, too, a 
science?  By Feynman's definition, it seems so. 
The reason why social science and its purveyors often gets such a bad rap 
has  less to do with the rigor of their methods and more to do with the 
perplexity of  their subject matter. Humanity and its cultural constructs are 
more enigmatic  than much of the natural world. _Even Feynman recognized this_ 
(http://www.phys.washington.edu/users/vladi/phys216/Feynman.html) . "Social 
problems are very much  harder than scientific ones," he noted. Social 
science itself may be an  enterprise doomed, not necessarily to fail, just to 
never fully succeed.  Utilizing science to study something inherently 
unscientific is a tricky  business.

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