1 / 15

Scientific Thinking and Psychology

Scientific Thinking and Psychology. Chapter 1 Tuesday January 14. Are we naturally good social scientists? Isn’t psychology really obvious?. Birds of a feather flock together BUT Opposites attract Look before you leap BUT He who hesitates is lost.

jamese
Download Presentation

Scientific Thinking and Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scientific Thinking and Psychology Chapter 1 Tuesday January 14

  2. Are we naturally good social scientists? Isn’t psychology really obvious?

  3. Birds of a feather flock together BUT Opposites attract Look before you leap BUT He who hesitates is lost

  4. Researchers have found that people with high/low self-confidence are more susceptible to flattery than those with low/high self-confidence.

  5. Are we naturally good social scientists? In fact, no – empirical research is especially needed because people think they know everything in advance, and because alternative explanations seem plausible

  6. Science… • Finds general rules • Collects objective evidence • Makes verifiable statements • Is skeptical • Is open-minded • Is creative • Is public • Is productive

  7. Science… • Is defined by its way of thinking • Is a process of asking questions • You can ask questions about almost anything • Scientists must be able to tolerate uncertainty because some questions cannot be easily or quickly answered

  8. Pseudoscience • Popular distortions of scientific knowledge and procedures that appear on the surface to be scientific

  9. Skepticism in science • To protect against pseudoscience • Refuse to accept any claim without knowing the evidence • Look for alternative explanations even when evidence is presented • Use critical thinking

  10. Critical Thinking • Ask questions; be willing to wonder • Define the problem • Examine the (empirical) evidence • Analyze assumptions and biases • Avoid emotional reasoning • Don’t oversimplify • Consider other interpretations • Tolerate uncertainty

  11. Ways to Acquire Knowledge • Tenacity: “it has always been that way” • Intuition: “it feels true” • Authority: “the boss says it is true” • Rationalism: “it makes sense logically” • Empiricism: “I observed it to be true” Science: a combination of rationalism and empiricism

  12. Rationalism • Relies on systematic logic and a set of premises from which logical inferences are made • Using logic to derive hypotheses

  13. Empiricism • System of knowing about the world that is based solely on observation of the events around us • The final arbiter of disputes is an appeal to the data

  14. So, rationalism or empiricism? • Neither alone is sufficient • Theory, no matter how intuitively appealing, is empty without empirical support • Data, no matter how free of subjective bias, are uninterpretable without a rational framework • Science = interplay of both

  15. The Science of Psychology • Defined as the systematic, objective study of human behavior • What does “objective” mean? • Science can never be free from the influence of the scientist’s beliefs • Rigorous empiricism needs to be tempered with careful rationalist analysis

More Related