heretic888
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This thread is a continuation of some issues brought up during the 'Discussion of Evolutionary Theory' thread. Enjoy.
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mrhnau said:For clarity, lets look at a nice definition of the scientific method [...]
mrhnau said:My definition of basest version is how strictly you interpret the method.
mrhnau said:Lets say some traumatic event occurs, someone gets fired from their job. How does this person deal with the situation? What types of emotions? As with all humans, we have alot of data that influences our reaction [...]
Needless to say, many things influence how we react to a unique situation. So, can there -ever- be true reproducibility?
mrhnau said:If you chose to make general statements, it seems alot less like a science. It would be sort of like Newton stating the Law of Gravity like "stuff falls down most of the time".
mrhnau said:Here is a good definition of Theory [...]
mrhnau said:How do you measure some psycological or social trait?
mrhnau said:Lets look at one of my personal examples. Went to the hospital a few years ago with some pain. Doctor asked "On a scale of 1 to 10, how bad is your pain with 10 being the worst". Is this not totally subjective? What feels like an 8? What feels like a 2? Would a 2 for you be a 2 for me? Its needed for the doctor, I understand that, but the "measurement" of pain in this instance is quite subjective. Can you call something that requires answers that are subjective a science?
mrhnau said:All one can measure is often what someone says. As humans, we have the ability to lie (protection of loved ones, embarassment, forgetting, repression).
mrhnau said:So, you ask someone "how do you feel" after some traumatic event, will you get an honest answer? Can you? You need a measurable in order to use statistics, so are these measurables often subjective by nature? From personal observations, the way you ask a question or even the time you ask a question can prompt a quite different response. Would you qualify this as a scientific process?
mrhnau said:What would you define as a consistent measurable and how could you possibly obtain one?
mrhnau said:IMHO, it would need to be almost purely biological, since as humans we can not be totally objective (at least IMO). At that point, we start leaving social sciences, and start approaching biology.
mrhnau said:And no, my experience w/ social sciences is not nil. My exposure to the field has been mostly negative, at least with regard to how I view the field.
Feisty Mouse said:Science is an approach to gathering information in what is ideally a testable, methodical, reproducible manner, based not on personal opinion or bias, but on what is empirically measurable (for a bit of a redundancy there).
Boo-yah.
My source. It is from a web page I found. If you would like, I could go dig up my sixth grade notes and cite them for you. Since around that point, you should have been made aware of what the scientific method is. As I stated clearly, its not my definition. If you want to quibble over the exact terms, feel free, but I feel its a waste of time here. The spirit of the definition remains. Debate that if you wish.heretic888 said:Unless you actually cite your source here, we have no reason to treat this other than your own personal definition. Which is all well and good, but isn't something you should expect the rest of the scientific community to be bound by.
If that definition works for you, thats quite fine. I personally like the one from Fiesty Mouse Will discuss that one later here.heretic888 said:My definition of science is derived from the work of Thomas Kuhn, in which there are three strands of all good "science":
1) A paradigm or injunction that one can engage to find something out.
2) An illumination or datum that is disclosed by the injunction.
3) Communal verification or rejection of those that have completed steps 1 and 2 themselves.
Anything else added to these three strands is nice and all, but not necessary to be considered "science".
1) Wow... as a psychologist, you must never deal with individuals. You must never perceive anyone as an individual. I never realized that someones life was a expiremental design. Great insight.heretic888 said:Your example is very weak in many regards:
1) A sample size of n=1, unless in the context of a case study, is a moronically stupid experimental design.
2) Your example seems to be looking for a sort of correlational research between two behavior variables. As such, you shouldn't expect causational "predictions" to be made.
3) Vague, broad, generalized questions will be met with vague, broad, generalized answers. You did not specifically define what it is you're testing, nor what your criteria for testing is.
4) Any organism with a nervous system is influenced by situational factors and past experiences. This is hardly a novelty among human beings.
5) None of the hundreds of psychology research articles I have read sound even vaguely like the example you are using.
Yes, you are quite right. Poor ignorant me. I don't have my PhD in psychology. Since you have never read anything like this, it must not exist.heretic888 said:I would be interested as to direct citations of peer-reviewed research studies that make general statements such as this in psychology.
Translation: You don't want to discuss the validity of the statement. Its a great evasion technique. If it was my definition, what would the difference be? If you disagree with the original statement, feel free to discuss.heretic888 said:Again, unless you cite your source here we have no reason to treat this than anything other than your personal definition.
Yes, I agree. See belowheretic888 said:It depends on whether you're doing qualitative or quantitive research, correlational or experimental, behavioral or cognitive, etcetera ad infinitum.
thank you for your cordial response, and hence the temperment of my reply. Again, you miss the obvious, so I will spell it out for you. I use an example to make a point, and attempt to generalize it. You obviously missed the generalization. My point is that measurables are not reliable in the field. Then again, I'm not the expert, you are.heretic888 said:That's your smoking gun? A survey?? That self-report can be unreliable??
Alert the press, everyone! Self-report can be unreliable!! Hot damn!! I mean, this is totally not something that every 18 year old taking their first day of Psych 101 at a community college learns or anything!!
Honestly, mrhnau, you seriously need to go to your local community college and start forking out the cash for psych classes. Pysch 101 and some kind of Research Methods would probably be the ideal place to start, given your general lack of knowledge concerning the field. Then you can move on to specific fields like social psychology, personality development, biopsychology, evolutionary psychology, behaviorism, and so on.
But, please, don't try to B.S. psychology to those of us that have actually put an intellectual and financial investment in it.
.... and, just for a point of clarification, self-report hasn't been used exclusively as a research methodology in psychology since about 1900. It was largely displaced by behaviorism.
Please do. Explain the measurables these tests obtain and the reliability. What proof exists that these measurables are reliable?heretic888 said:Jane Loevinger's Sentence Completion Test is a very good indicator of personality development in regards to a particular stage model. The principles of stimuli association and reinforcement from behaviorism have fared well in experimentation. Jean Piaget's logico-mathematical tests are good indicators of cognitive reasoning, as are the moral questions used to examine reasoning in Lawrence Kohlberg's stage-developmental moral reasoning paradigm. Howard Gardner has put forward a number of specific criteria concerning his multiple intelligences theory (such as evolutionary history, neurological pathway, specific developmental sequence, and so on). Social psychology has some rather interesting studies regarding conformity and obediance, as well as the useful cognitive dissonance theory. Cognitive psychology has developed useful methodologies for testing memory and perception.
Should I continue??
Again, I'm glad you never have to deal with individuals...heretic888 said:Notice how I'm drawing upon the specific research of specific theorists here, and not using vague, n=1 examples of "how you feel" after having been fired??
Really? Allow me to quote someone you just agreed with.heretic888 said:Sorry to burst your bubble, but most of the criteria in biology are just as "subjective" as those in psychology. The idea of some pure, pristine "objectivism" is more a fantasy than anything else.
Then how can you agree with this statement that Fiesty Mouse provided?Fiesty Mouse said:Science is an approach to gathering information in what is ideally a testable, methodical, reproducible manner, based not on personal opinion or bias, but on what is empirically measurable (for a bit of a redundancy there).
Again, thanks for the cordial attitude. As an undergrad student, I spent many happy hours discussing psychology with my friends who were in grad school studying psych. Looks like all psychologist are not quite as friendly when discussing their field. I'd hate to have you as a teacher.heretic888 said:In other words, my comment about self-confirming biases and academic narcissism was spot on. Good to know.
Laterz. :asian:
mrhnau said:My source. It is from a web page I found.
mrhnau said:If you would like, I could go dig up my sixth grade notes and cite them for you. Since around that point, you should have been made aware of what the scientific method is.
mrhnau said:If that definition works for you, thats quite fine. I personally like the one from Fiesty Mouse Will discuss that one later here.
mrhnau said:Let me see if I have the definition straight....so, if 1) I want to see if the door is locked. 2) I check and find out that its locked. 3) I confirm that its locked and I tell someone.
mrhnau said:I'm now engaging in science?
mrhnau said:1) Wow... as a psychologist, you must never deal with individuals. You must never perceive anyone as an individual. I never realized that someones life was a expiremental design. Great insight.
mrhnau said:3) Take it as you wish. I make a statement you consider general, you chose not to answer it, general or not, rather state it as a "weak example".
mrhnau said:4) another great insight. How would your insight possibly be related to my questioning? Saying something like a bug has the complex thought patterns of a man? Not met many bugs or other organisms that tend to lie/deceive as man does.
mrhnau said:5) I'm quite sorry my question did not fit w/ what you have read. Obviously my fault.
mrhnau said:Yes, you are quite right. Poor ignorant me. I don't have my PhD in psychology. Since you have never read anything like this, it must not exist.
mrhnau said:Translation: You don't want to discuss the validity of the statement.
mrhnau said:If you disagree with the original statement, feel free to discuss.
mrhnau said:I use an example to make a point, and attempt to generalize it. You obviously missed the generalization. My point is that measurables are not reliable in the field.
mrhnau said:Please do. Explain the measurables these tests obtain and the reliability. What proof exists that these measurables are reliable?
mrhnau said:Based on your definition, then biology would not be a science? Biology does have a certain degree of objectivity.
mrhnau said:You obviously are an expert in the field, as well as in the field of biology since you try to post w/ authority in the field of evolution too. I am obviously no match for your intellectual prowess.
mrhnau said:btw, my wife studied psychology for her undergraduate degree, and she agrees that psych is not a science... but I'm sure you don't care.
mrhnau said:Another psychologist care to chime in?
mrhnau said:I'd be curious what the consensus is.
arnisador said:I like Popper on this issue.
arnisador said:I just finished a two day seminar on C.S. Peirce's logic of scientific inquiry. Much fun! I learned, or at least was told, that Popper gave some credit to Peirce for Popper's views, but I'm not sure whwre the attribution occurs.