The rise of the social sciences in the later nineteenth-century Europe demonstrated
A) a return to Enlightenment rationality and a rejection of Romantic emotionalism.
B) an increasing failure of European intellectuals to make sense of the world around them.
C) a belief that science and the humanities had nothing to contribute to each other.
D) a confidence that spiritual man was as significant as scientific man.
E) that women were, by their nature, doomed to be second-class citizens.
Answer: A
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