The principles of social sciences are comprised of relativism, objectivity, ethical neutrality, determinism, and parsimony. Relativism is the understanding of all things are related. For example, the invention of streaming services led to more exposure to low funded creators and more creativity. There is also a great example that with the advancement of technology comes with new enacted laws to govern it. Almost every sector is connected to the cyberspace, so any changes effect cybersecurity. The next principle is objectivity which simply states that the study of cybersecurity should be objective. If scientist are opinionated then it hurts the advancement of the study immensely. Parsimony is the simplification of concepts and ideologies in cybersecurity. However, not everything could be simplified especially in relation to human behavior. Ethical Neutrality means that scientist should have a moral compass when conducting research, for example, when investigating how much money corporations make off of selling data. Determinism simply means any action has a reason clause that led to the preceding events. Cybersecurity requires a knowledge and understanding of several technical aspects which requires a deeper understanding of mathematical and scientific principles. A threat analysis needs to practice all of these principles when analyzing vulnerabilities, because it helps portray a bigger picture and leads an ultimate understanding of the network. Any work sector in cybersecurity that doesn’t practice the principles of science will be led to disarray because they will overlook certain things or simply not be equipped enough to tackle a certain scenario. The principles of social sciences is one of the main reasons why cybersecurity is deemed as a study of science.