Chapter 1: Understanding Social Science
Social Science is the systematic study of human society. It tells us not just what happened or where things are located, but also why events occur, how people live together, and how the past and present shape the world.
Table of Contents
Toggle1. What Makes Up Social Science?
Human beings live in societies and depend on each other. Our lives are shaped by the environment, the institutions that govern us, economic activities, and traditions passed down through generations. While Physics, Chemistry, and Biology study the natural world, Social Science focuses on society, institutions, cultures, and human interactions — exploring both what happens and why it happens.
2. Social Science in Everyday Life
Even simple daily activities — the house you live in, the food you eat, the roads you travel on, the school you attend — depend on systems of governance, economic production, social cooperation, and the natural environment.
Looking beyond our surroundings raises many questions that Social Science helps answer:
- Why do some people live in crowded cities while others live in scattered villages?
- Why do different communities speak different languages and follow different traditions?
- Why do some regions depend on farming while others focus on industry or trade?
- How do governments make decisions that affect millions of people?
- Why are certain regions more prone to floods?
- Why does agriculture flourish in some regions but not others?
- How does climate change influence our lives?
Society does not function by chance — it is shaped by history, geography, institutions, resources, and human choices. Social Science explores such questions through observation, evidence, and logical reasoning.
3. Understanding Society Through Time and Traditions
Early human communities depended directly on nature. Over time, people learnt to grow crops, domesticate animals, build settlements, develop tools, and organise systems of governance. Villages grew into towns, and towns into cities.
This spirit of inquiry has deep roots in India's knowledge traditions, where early thinkers valued discussion, questioning, and logical reasoning.
Pañchamahābhūtas
The idea that the natural world is made of five great elements — earth (Pṛithvī), water (Āpaḥ), fire (Agni), air (Vāyu), and space (Ākāśha). It describes the world as an interconnected system in which human life is embedded.
Vasudhaiva Kuṭumbakam
Meaning "the world is one family" — it expresses the interconnectedness of human societies across regions and cultures, a core idea behind studying global interactions.
Arthaśhāstra
Attributed to Kauṭilya, composed about 2,300 years ago. It examined administration, economic management, taxation, and the duties of rulers — proving systematic thinking on governance existed long before modern disciplines.
Genealogical Records: Documents that trace family lineage and ancestry by recording births, marriages, and deaths across generations.
4. Social Science as a Study of Disciplines
Human society is complex — no single field can fully explain it. For example, a drought affects crops (environment), farmers' incomes (economy), government relief (politics), migration (society), and coping traditions (culture). So Social Science is a group of related disciplines, each focusing on one aspect of human life.
Fig: The four core disciplines of Social Science (Grades 9–10)
Geography
Geography studies the location and distribution of places, objects, materials, and people, and the relationships between human societies and their surroundings. It combines a spatial perspective (location) with a temporal perspective (change over time), drawing on both natural sciences and social sciences. It uses tools such as maps, globes, atlases, and Geographical Information System (GIS).
History
History is the study of the human past, helping us understand people's experiences, values, and changes over time. In Bharat, the itihāsa-purāṇa tradition preserved cultural memory through stories. Modern historiography relies on empirical evidence using tools like human genetics, carbon-14 dating, and archaeology.
| Type of Source | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Literary Sources | Written traditions such as travelogues, memoirs, correspondence, genealogical records, and folklore | Sāmaveda manuscript, Tirukkuṟaḷ palm-leaf manuscript |
| Archaeological Sources | Material remains studied using scientific instruments and lab testing | Terracotta figurine (Sindhu-Sarasvatī Civilisation), Viṣhṇu sculpture |
| Epigraphic Sources | Texts, decrees, or records inscribed on durable materials like stone or metal | Brahmi inscription (Gupta period), Kannada inscription of Krishnadeva Raya |
| Numismatic Sources | Coins, currency, or medals that help study economy, chronology, rulers, and trade | Samudragupta's coin, Jahangir's Mughal coin |
Table: Types of historical sources (scroll horizontally on mobile)
Political Science
Political Science is the study of governance — how and why power is distributed, decisions are made, and policies are implemented. In India's villages, the Panchayati Raj system embodies grassroots democracy. Indian political thought linked politics with dharma (moral duty), artha (economic well-being), and rājadharma (duties of the ruler), as articulated in texts like the Vedas, Mahābhārata, Śhukranīti, and the Arthaśhāstra.
Economics
Economics studies how individuals and societies decide to use limited resources to meet unlimited needs — how goods and services are produced, exchanged, and distributed. India was once one of the world's leading economies; colonial rule disrupted this progress, leading to poverty and famine. After independence, India rebuilt through improvements in infrastructure, education, and technology.
5. Why Should We Study Social Science?
- Helps us understand how everyday systems (roads, schools, markets, digital spaces) are created and managed by society.
- Explains why diversity in language, customs, and occupation exists, and how Indian culture binds this diversity through underlying unity.
- Prepares citizens to participate responsibly in democratic and civic life by understanding how governments function.
- Builds the habit of asking informed questions about causes, effects, and solutions to shared challenges like environment and public health.
- Connects the past, present, and future — helping us make wiser choices.
6. The Future of Social Science
As societies change rapidly due to new technologies, expanding cities, environmental concerns, and migration, Social Science will help address climate change, sustainable development, social harmony, and equitable use of resources — preparing informed and thoughtful citizens rooted in cultural traditions.
7. Your Two-Year Learning Journey (Grades 9–10)
Over the next two years, you will study how historical events shaped the modern world, how geography influences human life, how political and democratic systems function, and how economies organise production and development — along with contemporary challenges like environmental sustainability and technology's impact.
