I'm not sure. A lot of posters are posting questions about why there are so many flavors of psychology.
@unenlightened, do you know why this is, if I may be so bold? — Shawn
With no further introduction to give, I ask the reader whether they think psychology is an important field or whether any of the above makes sense to assert about the importance that philosophers purported was the examination of one's life? — Shawn
in psychology, the objects of observation are themselves observers, scientists, and psychological theorisers. — unenlightened
Their theories of psychology radically affect their own psychology. — unenlightened
So, for example, Freud's theories of sexual repression stemmed from observations of 'hysterical' wealthy women. It led to a change of mind of Western society, and eventually a sexual liberation — unenlightened
Therefore, the methods of science cannot be reliably used in psychology — unenlightened
Which would be a theory of psychology, so we'll just presume it'll become obsolete soon as fashion changes, yes? — Isaac
Even if your theory had a shred of evidence from nearer than a hundred years ago, — Isaac
It's the sort of circularity a five year old could spot. — Isaac
There are also countless theories in physics, until we settle on the best one. Then we continuously revise. — khaled
The list of defunct mental illnesses and defunct psychological theories is a very long one. — unenlightened
tim wood and I get along pretty well, philosophically, except when we don't. He has some pretty strong... opinions that always get me started - his antipathy towards religion and psychology are prime examples. — T Clark
I'm always happy to get to use "antipathy" in a post. — T Clark
The issue is applied psychology, as it is applied by people in positions of power, whether they have a degree in psychology or not, and the legal power that these people have.Even if your theory had a shred of evidence from nearer than a hundred years ago, you've not shown at all how it would actually prevent the application of the scientific method, only that it would present the field with some unique challenges. — Isaac
And which leaves me wondering just what exactly psychology is. Maybe just a family name for differing methods and subjects they're applied to? — tim wood
Yes, definitely a very difficult and contentious issue in clinical psychology. What do you propose as an alternative? — Isaac
The issue is applied psychology, as it is applied by people in positions of power, whether they have a degree in psychology or not, and the legal power that these people have. — baker
What a strange thing to say. Science is science. If something is indeed a science, then it should be science all the way down.The problems with applied psychology have nothing to do with whether or not psychology is a science. — T Clark
What a strange thing to say. Science is science. If something is indeed a science, then it should be science all the way down. — baker
Pick up any introductory book on the theme of scientific methodology, and you'll see the first chapters are devoted to errors in measurement and how to minimize them. — baker
Clinical psychologists will be interested in that. I wonder what their degrees say.Applied psychology is not psychology. — T Clark
Nor this a carpenter, but what, or among the things that, carpenters do.Hitting a nail with a hammer is not a hammer. — T Clark
It seems obvious to me (from this site alone) that the vast majority of people are completely unaware of the vast majority of theories in contemporary psychology. — Isaac
Clinical psychologists will be interested in that. I wonder what their degrees say. — tim wood
Nor this a carpenter, but what, or among the things that, carpenters do. — tim wood
You said you'd like to demonstrate (not your word) that psychology is a science. What sort of a start might you make? Having your plane shot-up before it gets off the ground is better all-'round than it's being shot down after it gets up. But that's only if your start is no good. If instead it's good, then maybe we all learn. — tim wood
Science operates on the assumption that atoms do not understand atomic theory - in general that the objects of scientific study are not altered by the theory on has of them. At the quantum level, this becomes difficult because the act of observation itself affects the observed and this leads to the uncertainty principle. However, in psychology, the objects of observation are themselves observers, scientists, and psychological theorisers. Their theories of psychology radically affect their own psychology. — unenlightened
Yep. But what of it? The question is to psychology. — tim wood
My view, in brief from above, is that science is about replicable results from experiments. — tim wood
If they are supposed to have that same measure of legal power, then psychologists should get their act together and agree on one theory and enforce it, one objective system of measurement. — baker
once you have granted the principle, which seems obvious enough, that people (and societies) are altered by the prevailing psychology of the time, which you seem not to dispute in principle, then it is but a semblance. What is clear enough, surely, is that electrons are not affected significantly by the theories we have about them, but people most certainly are. this means that if there is something like an understanding of the human psyche to be had, it is not of the same order as physics. — unenlightened
I find online this list of psychologists along with a comment on their field: — tim wood
My view, in brief from above, is that science is about replicable results from experiments. Psychology about speculative theorizing about things not adequately subject to experiment, and usually understood not to be. — tim wood
Is this subjectivism or relativism at its core? — Shawn
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