Top 80+ Solved Methodology and Perspective of Social Science MCQ Questions Answer
Q. Hobbes believed that the very principle of the universe is
a. The movement or motion
b. passion and imagination
c. critical thinking
d. observation
Q. The first philosophical work of Hobbes
a. The Elements of Law
b. Leviathan
c. Social Contract
d. None of these
Q. Thomas Hobbes’ interest in philosophy was greatly stimulated by hisdiscovery of the world of
a. Sociology
b. Mathematics
c. Biology
d. Astronomy
Q. Who tells about Universal law and Natural Law?
a. Montesquieu
b. Plato
c. Aristotle
d. John Locke
Q. Locke believed that human beings were originally
a. Isolated independent being
b. Social cooperative being
c. Asocial competitive being
d. None of these
Q. The major task of the state is the preservation of the liberty, peace, safetyand public good of the people- Who commented so?
a. Hobbes
b. Locke
c. Rousseau
d. Moynihan
Q. Rousseau believed that refer of society would only be possible if allmembers shared equally in the construction of
a. Culture and belief
b. Nature and behavior
c. Pattern of life
d. laws for human’s common happiness
Q. Who said that property is the root of all evil which brought about war,conflict, and misery
a. Montesquieu
b. Locke
c. Hobbes
d. Rousseau
Q. Whose belief is that man’s original nature was corrupted by society and that the only way man could become virtuous, moral being was to totally transform society.
a. Rousseau
b. Hobbes
c. John Locke
d. Montesquieu
Q. Rousseau’s focus was on the possibility of
a. Social condition and situation
b. exchanging ideas
c. Life experiences
d. drastic social change
Q. Rousseau thought that society was formed as a result of
a. human interaction
b. Faith and belief
c. Give and take relationship of human beings
d. a contract among individuals
Q. The scientific approach to the study of human beings seeks to emphasize theneed to blend the perspectives of
a. Arts, Mathematics and Science
b. Nature, Culture and Civilization
c. Natural sciences, Social Sciences and humanities
d. all the above