Which of these best describes a societal law?
A)A rule which is always true under the same conditions
B)A statement about how things act in the natural world
C)A rule that is sometimes broken under certain circumstances
D)A statement which describes a specific relationship under given conditions
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Option A is the answer
bepositive10:
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"A rule which is always true under the same conditions," best describes societal law.
- A societal law or social law is a unified concept of law, which replaces the classical division of public law and private law.
- It is a unified concept that stands true since both concepts of law are involved at the same time.
- Due to the involvement of both public and private law if one thing stands false in one case it might stand true in another.
- A statement about how things act in the natural world is not a societal law. Hence, option B is incorrect.
- A rule that is sometimes broken under certain circumstances is also not called societal law.
- A statement that describes a specific relationship under given conditions is again not called societal law.
- Thus, the best way to describe a societal law is, "A rule which is always true under the same conditions."
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