Sorry to keep harping on this but how about Albert Camus and the myth of Sisyphus? Will you call out philosophy as being a mythology?Naming something from mythology is not the same as relying on it produce an explanatory hypothesis. — TheMadFool
Sorry to keep harping on this but how about Albert Camus and the myth of Sisyphus? Will you call out philosophy as being a mythology? — Yohan
Sometimes it just makes sense to give up. — T Clark
What wild accusations? — tim wood
Please, you're embarrassing yourself.... It's not fucking yellow either is it? Moron. — Isaac
You're the one who wrote the above. — tim wood
I have taken some care to qualify my remarks about psychology — tim wood
whatever the results, they are specific and non-replicable — tim wood
even if many studies were done on different groups, how do you control for group variability. — tim wood
"These results suggest...". Plausibly. — tim wood
It's time for you to say what science is. — tim wood
science is the application of the scientific method and where not applied, then not science. And this would seem obvious — tim wood
If psych. is to be all science, then all of it must be science. — tim wood
That seems like a good description of the Boulder Model, which is the basis for training "scientist-practitioners." From what I have heard from clinical psychologists, many institutions handle cases as teams, consisting of a number of disciplines to develop diagnosis and response. Taking responsibility for treatment is a demanding and complicated process. — Valentinus
Myths are illustrative, yeah. I don't agree Freud would think myths are more than that. But I'll let it go.Camus' myth of sisyphis is an illustration. Freud's Oedipus complex is an explantion — TheMadFool
Myths are illustrative, yeah. I don't agree Freud would think myths are more than that. But I'll let it go. — Yohan
Even if the theory is based on the myth, which I doubt, I don't see how that makes it a myth nor reliant on the myth. I don't get you at all.Freud's theory is, as I've now repeated for the umpteenth time, based off of Oedipus — TheMadFool
The myth of Sisyphus is a metaphor.Camus' Sisyphus on the other hand is merely an analogy employed to illustrate the futile nature of human existence. — TheMadFool
Oedipus complex ≠ Myth of OedipusDo you see the difference now? — TheMadFool
Then how do you explain the position of almost every academy and school of science in the world? Are they all wrong and only you right? — Isaac
The wishful thinking of psychologists and some others — tim wood
Let's set aside for the moment the question about psychology and consider a more fundamental question: what makes something be what it is? For example, a car in a field lacking its engine can be called a car but it really isn't one, and its engine by itself isn't a car. So it's reasonable to ask - not that it comes up often - just what is the without-which-not, the sine qua non, of a car? — tim wood
Even if the theory is based on the myth, which I doubt, I don't see how that makes it a myth nor reliant on the myth. I don't get you at all.
The Oedipus complex and the Oedipus Myth describe the same thing, that's all. The myth doesn't explain the theory, it describes it. (Although technically description is a preliminary step in the explanation process) — Yohan
The myth of Sisyphus is a metaphor.
The myth explains why human life is futile. It doesn't just fit a description, it explains the reason.
Camus explanation of WHY human life is futile is analogous with the explanation of the futility of Sisyphus' predicament. — Yohan
What's your problem then? I use, use, use (and not alone) psychology to mean an enterprise, when being done, that is not scientific or not altogether scientific, science being the enterprise of following the scientific method.Use. Use. Use.... They mean exactly what they are used to mean. — Isaac
I reiterate my advice to you. Time to give up. — T Clark
I use, use, use (and not alone) psychology to mean an enterprise, when being done, that is not scientific or not altogether scientific, science being the enterprise of following the scientific method. — tim wood
Show me shifting ground and I'll concede! Show me cabalistic language use and I'll concede! But all you apparently care about is the title on the door! And for that you claim but do not demonstrate. Even a simple question about Erik Erikson baffles you, apparently, or is too threatening to answer!Nothing here but constantly shifting ground — Isaac
Here's my personal take on psychology for your consideration. — TheMadFool
You often have interesting and useful things to say on the subjects we talk about on this forum. On the other hand, the only reasonable way to deal with your opinions on this subject is not to participate in the discussion — T Clark
What would you replace that power with. Criminals all get treated the same regardless of their mental health? — Isaac
Psychology is the study of mind and behavior according to Wikipedia — TheMadFool
I won't object to that. Different strokes for different folks. — TheMadFool
And what's the definition of philosophy according to Wikipedia? — magritte
"Philosophy is the study of general and fundamental questions", which ought to answer two other questions? — magritte
So if psychologists can't give a definition then they can't know any psychology but are just technicians following a custom? — magritte
Where have I heard that argument before? — magritte
Which one is in question? — magritte
If psychology is a science then what is a science? Is it just some dogma curricular for high schools and wikis or is there specialized education and trained practice to be learned and certified? Why isn't an economist or archeologist a psychologist? — magritte
I think you and I have a fundamentally different idea of what it takes to justify an argument — T Clark
It is not and never was. BecausePsychology, from what I've gathered, is the study of human nature. — TheMadFool
is a bullshit question, being neither philosophy nor psychology.human nature - does it even exist? — TheMadFool
is just ignorant. No science is certain, nor can any science ever be certain.Science is certain — TheMadFool
Same as for all science. Even the strongest laws of physics are statistical when applied to the world.Statistical claims like those found in psychology tolerate errors in prediction — TheMadFool
It is not and never was — magritte
human nature - does it even exist?
— TheMadFool
is a bullshit question, being neither philosophy nor psychology. — magritte
Science is certain
— TheMadFool
is just ignorant. No science is certain, nor can any science ever be certain. — magritte
Statistical claims like those found in psychology tolerate errors in prediction
— TheMadFool
Same as for all science. Even the strongest laws of physics are statistical when applied to the world. — magritte
is a loose essentialist construct that has gotten a lot of clicks. Examples of thrashings about in attempts to make sense of it can be found in Hume's foundational A Treatise of Human Nature and the online SEP article. I'll leave to you to say what 'human nature' is if you can say what your human nature is concisely without reference to examples of your daily habits."human nature" — TheMadFool
For its part, psychology has no essential definition because definitions in psychology are ultimately not conventional or even philosophical. — magritte
Oh Jesus.I think some people have seen movies like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest too many times. — Tom Storm
"These results suggest...". Plausibly. — tim wood
*aww*But to my knowledge, there's not one school out there which thinks it can 'see' psychological processes directly — Isaac
Not when you're on the other side -- when you're the one in position of less power.That's what I do with psychologists! I poke them and watch them squirm.
— unenlightened
That's what I do with everyone...is that not normal...
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