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r/socialscience
25.9k members
The social sciences comprise academic disciplines concerned with the study of the social life of human groups and individuals including anthropology, communication studies, economics, human geography, history, political science, psychology and sociology.
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r/AskSocialScience
116k members
Welcome to r/AskSocialScience
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r/science
30.7m members
This community is a place to share and discuss new scientific research. Read about the latest advances in astronomy, biology, medicine, physics, social science, and more. Find and submit new publications and popular science coverage of current research.
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r/PhilosophyofScience
115k members
Welcome to r/PhilosophyofScience
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r/SocialScienceResearch
676 members
Discuss statistics, best practices, controversies, and research methods in social science.
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r/TransSocialScience
225 members
The place for any and all academic information about trans+ gender identity and history from the perspective of social sciences. This includes history, anthropology, psychology, sociology, etc., but not, for instance neuroscience. **Read the guidelines before posting**
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r/datascience
1.0m members
A place for data science practitioners and professionals to discuss and debate data science career questions.
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r/HITsWorthTurkingFor
88.2k members
HWTF is a subreddit dedicated to posting links to good paying tasks, called HITs (Human Intelligence Tasks), that are available to be completed on Amazon's crowdsourcing service - Amazon Mechanical Turk.
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r/atheism
2.8m members
Welcome to r/atheism, the web's largest atheist forum. All topics related to atheism, agnosticism and secular living are welcome. If you wish to learn more about atheism, please begin by reading the [FAQ](https://www.reddit.com/r/atheism/wiki/faq). If you are a theist, please be aware that proselytizing in any form is strictly prohibited. * Feel free to join our [Discord](https://discord.gg/gYPuj8R.
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r/EverythingScience
479k members
/r/EverythingScience is the sister subreddit to /r/science. With a broader rule set than /r/science, it is the place for high quality scientific content that doesn't necessarily reference a peer-reviewed paper from the last 6 months.
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r/askscience
24.4m members
Ask a science question, get a science answer.
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r/Conservative
1.1m members
The largest conservative subreddit. https://discord.gg/conservative
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r/AskAcademia
1.4m members
This subreddit is for discussing academic life, and for asking questions directed towards people involved in academia, (both science and humanities).
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r/PoliticalScience
46.9k members
A subreddit to discuss political science. Political science is the scientific study of politics. It deals with systems of governance and power, and the analysis of political activities, political thought, political behavior, and associated constitutions and laws. Postings about current events are fine, as long as there is a political science angle. Rationality and coherent argument are encouraged, whereas ideological flamewars are strongly discouraged.
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r/AskReddit
43.0m members
r/AskReddit is the place to ask and answer thought-provoking questions.
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r/politics
8.4m members
/r/Politics is for news and discussion about U.S. politics.
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r/UCI
44.2k members
A place for UCI Anteaters, and anything UCI related. DISCORD: https://discord.gg/uci
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r/todayilearned
32.9m members
You learn something new every day; what did you learn today? Submit interesting and specific facts about something that you just found out here.
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r/compsocialsci
813 members
Computational Social Science (CSS) is the science that investigates social and behavioral dynamics through social simulation,social network analysis, and social media analysis.
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r/SocialSciences
422 members
Welcome to r/SocialSciences
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r/sociology
103k members
A community for academic sociology and sociological discussions.
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r/GradSchool
443k members
Discussion forum for current, past, and future students of any discipline completing post-graduate studies - taught or research.
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r/lectures
94.6k members
This subreddit is all about video lectures, talks and interesting public speeches. The topics include mathematics, physics, computer science, programming, engineering, biology, medicine, economics, politics, social sciences, and any other subjects!
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r/gradadmissions
216k members
This subreddit is for anyone who is going through the process of getting into graduate school, and for those who've been there and have advice to give.
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r/quantum
46.1k members
Scientific discourse about quantum mechanics and related fields. Not for discussions about interpretations or speculative theories.
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r/GED
10.3k members
Welcome to r/GED
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r/psychology
1.8m members
A Reddit community for sharing and discussing science-based psychological material.
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r/dataanalysis
67.7k members
We have taken the subreddit dark in protest of the change in Reddit policies around third-party access to APIs. These changes would negatively affect Reddit as a community. For further information, please read: https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/8/23754780/reddit-api-updates-changes-news-announcements
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r/statistics
542k members
/r/Statistics is going dark from June 12-14th as an act of protest against Reddit's treatment of 3rd party app developers. _This community will not grant access requests during the protest. Please do not message asking to be added to the subreddit._
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r/ApplyingToCollege
1.0m members
r/ApplyingToCollege is the premier forum for college admissions questions, advice, and discussions, from college essays and scholarships to SAT/ACT test prep, career guidance, and more.
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โ€ขPosted byu/[deleted]2 years ago
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โ€ขPosted byu/[deleted]2 years ago
Archived

Many of you probably have seen a headline talking about a 6-7 year-old getting a STEM related degree in a university and/or doing something considered advanced in those fields.

I don't have a reference right know, but people who have studied topics about history of math/natural sciences probably know that many important authors published papers at a young age (20-30 years-old) and were working in difficult theories in their childhood and teenager years.

Despite all of that, I have never really seen any child or teen capable of articulate methodologically relevant arguments on Philosophy, Sociology, Anthropology, Politics, Economics and the such. I mean, I never heard about child/teen prodigies being compared to Marx or Hegel, but I hear a lot about them being compared to Newton or Einstein.

I have seen many child prodigies memorize the world map or names of world leaders, but never heard about a child talking/writing about advanced topics on Kant's Ethics or Marxian Economics.

Another thing I noticed is that many important authors in STEM fields tend to be young, while in Humanities/Social Sciences is the opposite, that is, they're usually old. Why is this so? Or am I wrong?

I'm sorry if this sounds like a stupid question, but I'm really curious about the answer. Is there something to do with the method used in those disciplines? The amount of academic literature required to reach a certain level of proficiency or the like? Or am I just failing in social media sensationalism and those children/teens aren't as bright as the journalists depict them?

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