this is something you have to read about in your textbook
The differences between life sciences and physical sciences generally lie in the realm of the mathematics involved to define them. Life sciences typically are less grounded in pure mathematical theory and are the result of extensive experimentation and observational results. They can often have unexpected results due to the ever changing nature of living things. Physical sciences are much easier to define via mathematics, as they typically do not change but operate off highly repetitive phenomena whose behavior can be modelled in advance.
Everything! All the supplies we have for science have either come from nature or have been based upon nature! Also ,some sciences are based on studying nature.
Physical science is the study of nature and the earth. The physical sciences include physics, chemistry, biology, zoology, and geology.
The 3 parts of science are (physics), (organic, life, nature sciences), (and chemistry).
Law, in the sense of the legal system, is more of an art than a science. However, science also deals with the laws of nature.
Physics is the measuring and counting science, and much of it forms the base of other sciences. And physics aims to investigate the most fundamental questions about matter and the nature of dimensions.Lord Kelvin said ~'When you measure something, you can start to understand it.'Ernest Rutherford said ~ ' The only science is physics - all the rest are stamp collecting.' Which is a bit arrogant - but has a grain of truth.[ the tilde ~ means approximately.]
Physical Science generally consists of Physics and Chemistry (and arguably other, more specific sciences such as Material Science, etc.). Physical Science is a part of Natural Science (the science(s) which study nature).
Natural Science: a scientific field that deals with the objects, phenomena, or laws of nature and the physical world. Some examples of natural sciences are, physics, biology and chemistry. Applied Science: the application of knowledge from one or more natural sciences to slove practical problems. Engineering fields are related to applied sciences. That's a basic overview of the two.
Science is focused on "how does this work". Philosophy is more about "but what if" and "why does this".
Jacques Gadille has written: 'Des sciences de la nature aux sciences de l'homme' -- subject(s): History, Humanities, Philosophy, Science
Almost all academic institutions would have some kind of science courses. For instance, Cambridge University in the UK offers courses in the Natural sciences. Harvard, Yale and Marquette all have sciences courses.
Social Sciences include the study of economics, geography, history, political science, psychology, social studies, and sociology. Natural sciences are the disciplines that study Dichotomy between formalism and world veiw.