Political Science, asked by sanjaykagwl, 4 months ago

tell anything that can't brokn​

Answers

Answered by riteshvishwakarma585
0

Explanation:

body parts of the human being

Answered by ds3342053
0

anything can be broken like our body part our books our home things our hearts alsosocial science, it would integrate its perspectives by working at these different levels of

culture.

Yet, for reasons that seem to be purely ideological (and perhaps religiously motivated, in order to

avoid recognizing evolution and the connection of humans to nature), Political Science has chosen not to

fit itself within the level of human cultures, evolution of humans (and the politics of primates), or most of

human history. It has avoided the study of “Intercultural Relations” of political systems and political

determinants and organization of cultures and has substituted only relations of the European, colonially

imposed “nation states” and the colonial governing systems of nation states at the level of “nation states”.

That is what is clearly implied by the sub-discipline of “International Relations”. The implication of the

structure of the entire discipline is that it is defined by a political mission to further nation states rather

than to study the actual science of politics and government. “Comparative Politics” is essentially the

study of “Comparative Nation-State Colonial and Post-Colonial Systems” and “Public Administration” is

essentially the study of “Colonial Government Administration” rather than of the actual scope of human

political action and governance at all levels.

The actual boundaries that Political Science has set in relation to fields like anthropology and

sociology, seems to be for these political ideological reasons rather than for disciplinary ones, described

in the following sections. The sub-disciplines of “Political Sociology” and “Political Anthropology”

reflect the distortions created by the inability of Political Science to actually

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