And anything that focuses on a higher level of interaction
between social organisms, or involves the mind in any way (psychology, sociology) goes into SOCIAL SCIENCE.
Not exact matches
Between these two reductive positions the
social sciences may portray the person as a complex
organism equipped with intellectual powers for adaptive adjustment to its environment, both natural and human.
But just as all living
organisms have a beginning and an end, going through a life cycle
between conception and death, so it is with
social organisms.
Examples of such areas include understanding relationships
between intended genetic changes and an
organism's observable traits, the unintended effects of genetic changes on target and non-target
organisms, predicting and monitoring ecosystem responses, and quantifying the economic and
social costs and benefits of biotechnologies.