Psychology is exactly as you describe it — TheMadFool
So psychology is a pseudo-science, soft science, non-science?
Which is it? — Yohan
For fuck's sake.
https://www.psychol.cam.ac.uk/research/research-centres
What of that list looks anything even vaguely resembling Jung and Freud.
Do you people bother to do even a shred of research before vomiting up your ad hoc reckons? — Isaac
I said what I wanted to say. — TheMadFool
It's obvious that psychology is far from being a science at par with physics or even for that matter biology. Why else all the controversy surrounding its scientific status? No smoke without fire is how I see it. — TheMadFool
What an utterly stupid thing to say - your chosen side in any controversy is automatically right simply by virtue of there being a controversy. — Isaac
Ergo, if experts don't see eye to eye on an issue, here psychology, I'm warranted to doubt the claims of psychologists that what they're doing is science. — TheMadFool
I don't get why it has to be one or the other. By observing people's behavior and analysing it, and testing my analyses, I can arrive at insights, indirectly, about the psyche. There is no strict formula for arriving at a discovery. It requires both rigor as well as flexibility. It's an art and a science. I think this is true of any field of inquiry.The mind is not a physical object. Thus psyche is not amenable to scientific study; rather it requires insight. It is the absence of insight that makes this appear controversial obscure and difficult to make sense of. The education system teaches the ignoring and denying of insight as "unscientific" - which of course it is. — unenlightened
1. Quote an expert claiming that the whole of psychology is not a science and we might then have something to go off, other wise bringing up expert testimony is useless. — Isaac
2. "I'm warranted to doubt the claims of psychologists that what they're doing is science" is not the same as "psychology is simply mythology in modern form" is it? Not by a very long margin. — Isaac
If there were an expert in the field who claimed that the whole of psychology was not a science, then you would have cause to doubt that the whole of psychology is not a science. Since you've neither provided such an expert, not limited your claims to just doubt I can't see what relevance your little syllogism might have to the matter at hand. — Isaac
What, generally, then, do you say is the subject matter of psychology? And how is it done scientifically? With science being understood as employing scientific method.failed to make the case that psychology sensu lato is unscientific. — Isaac
the rather nebulous use of 'insight' — Isaac
Coming to Freud, the alleged person who put psychology on the map, one only needs to look at how his theory is centered around the so-called Oedipus complex. Oedipus being the perfect analogy for Freud's theories is a dead giveaway - psychology is simply mythology in modern form. — TheMadFool
I'm sorry, I'm too tired to search for references to that effect. — TheMadFool
What, generally, then, do you say is the subject matter of psychology? And how is it done scientifically? With science being understood as employing scientific method. — tim wood
As to the personality theorists, you may not consider them psychologists, but the rest of the world including psychologists consider them psychologists, and what they were doing as psychology. — tim wood
I judge psychology by the company it keeps and whom it lives with. And perhaps you judge the whole by some of its parts. — tim wood
if I notice that someone is identified with 'psychology' and gets angry and defensive when it is questioned or criticised, that is an observation — unenlightened
I must be careful here, because it is easy to misunderstand. I can make such observations of myself in memory; looking back in the thread I might see something like that, but it would not then be an insight. — unenlightened
But my philosophy always prioritises the relation as fundamental; the observer and the observed are both united and only exist in the observation. The observation is reality; the observer and the observed are 'aspects'. — unenlightened
Science is the selfless observation of the world, and one cannot have a selfless observation of the self. — unenlightened
Are anger and defensiveness not aspects of the psyche? You seem to be saying here that you can do psychology but psychologists can't. I think I understood you better before the explanation! — Isaac
Aspects of what? Aspect of a relation? — Shawn
I'm not entirely sure why; but, Buddhism seems like a way of life originating from a selfless observation of the self from Buddha. Why isn't Buddhism more popular in psychology? — Shawn
Don't know what that is. I observe. Do I observe scientifically? What would that be? And how, exactly, scientific? And what then? I theorize. Is that scientific? And so forth. — tim wood
do you consider geology, paleontology, evolutionary biology, ecology, astronomy, and oceanography to be sciences? — T Clark
If you can't be bothered to defend your defamation of an entire field of research, perhaps consider not publishing it. — Isaac
I thought an engineer might know better. In all of these "hard" science is done, with close observation and various kinds of laboratory analysis. How, for example, do we know that what is now Australia long ago was a short walk from Spokane, WA? Not by casual speculation or idle observation, but by chemical analysis of bits of sand from the two regions. Turns out to be the same sand! Paleontology? How about carbon and other ways of dating. Evolutionary biology? By the presence and juxtaposition of similarities and differences in animals separated by millennia. Ecology? how about chemistry. Astronomy? Mathematics, physics, and close and careful observation. Oceanography? Chemistry and physics. — tim wood
I do indeed consider them psychologists. Your claim was not that psychology has aspects which are unscientific, your claim was that the whole of psychology is unscientific, — Isaac
Well you are the psychologist; perhaps you should say what is the psyche. — unenlightened
from my side, I would say that what one can observe is behaviour and perhaps brain imagery with equipment, and these are not psyche. Psyche is inner; psyche is the immediacy, the presence that makes the present present. — unenlightened
Get a can of blue paint, paint a wall blue and claim it's blue and the world will agree. Mix the blue with yellow, paint the wall and claim it's blue and the world will tell you it's green. Or paint it in alternate blue and yellow stripes and claim it's blue and the world will again note the error. — tim wood
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.