In a recent episode of my podcast I stated that contrary to the
advocates of The Secret (who claim that the "law of attraction" is a
"fundamental law in psychology"), I knew of only two concepts in
psychology which are referred to as "laws" - Thorndike's Law of Effect
and Weber's law. Fell
Dear Michael,
This may only throw a huge spanner in the works, but McBurney and White's book
on research methods use the term "law" as equivalent to "relationship". So, for
example, the frustration-aggression hypothesis is a law for them. There would
be many "laws" with this approach!
Stuart
Well, I would certainly include Fechner's and Weber's laws.
At 09:14 AM 8/12/2008, you wrote:
In a recent episode of my podcast I stated that contrary to the
advocates of The Secret (who claim that the "law of attraction" is a
"fundamental law in psychology"), I knew of only two concepts in
psy
I don't know - saying that something that is a "relationship" can be
referred to as a "law" is a little too mushy a definition for my tastes.
Michael
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.thepsychfiles.com
On Aug 12, 2008, at 10:24 AM, Stuart McKelvie wrote:
> Dear Michael,
>
> This may only throw a huge spa
Please note that what are referred as laws in psychology are really
"principles" Principles allow for experimental verification but laws may
not.
Michael Sylvester,PhD
Daytona Beach,Florida
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I do not disagree with you, but it raises the question of what a "law" shuld
mean. Is it simply a relationship that is well-established, highly replicable
and beyond doubt, or there something more?
Stuart
I don't know - saying that something that is a "relationship" can be
referred to as a
I don't think that "law" denotes anything particularly fundamental in
psychology (other than the fact that the author decided to
ostentatiously name his or her idea a "law" rather than a "principle," a
"theory" or a "conjecture").
Also, I may be wrong, but I think that Weber only had a "fracti
One reason might be that Flynn's observations are restricted to one
specific situation, whereas Skinner's have been shown to generalize
across situations.
On Aug 12, 2008, at 10:19 AM, Christopher D. Green wrote:
Why would these be "laws" and, say, the graphs associated with
Skinner's
sch
Dear Tipsters
Wise counsel from Chris, who has the historical perspective on this
question.
I wonder if he or someone else can enlighten us if physics has a special
meaning for "law"?
Stuart
I don't think that "law" denotes anything particularly fundamental in
psychology (other than the fact
On Aug 12, 2008, at 10:19 AM, Christopher D. Green wrote:
> Why would these be "laws" and, say, the graphs associated with Skinner's
> schedules of reinforcement, not be? Why are these "laws" and Flynn's
> discoveries about the rise in intelligence an "effect"? (an "effect" of
> what? time?)
Paul
Thanks Chris. I think you're right that arguing over whether we
should refer to psychological findings - even solidly replicatable
ones - as laws is not worth our time. It looks like the word "law" is
used too indescriminantly by scientists and non-scientists alike.
Michael
Michael Britt
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***
Okay, here's the updated list. Unfortunately, I won't be there after all,
but I hope there will be some TIPS convergences!
Beth Benoit
Granite State College
New Hampshire
Attendees at APA in Boston, 2008:
Albert Bramante (Union County College, Cranford NJ) (cell: 732-207-7696 and
email: [E
So psychologists conclude there are no scientific laws (in psych?) in the sense
of established, reliable relationships, or that the word is meaningless in
psychology? I take it the latter is the popular consensus? A scientific law
or principle in psychology is the same as theory or theoretica
You are free to define it however you would like Gary. My point was only
that it has not been used in a consistent way, either in psychology, or
in the rest of natural science. So the question of why claim A is called
a "law" and claim 2 isn't turns out to be more of an fuzzy historical
questio
On 12 Aug 2008 at 13:58, Christopher D. Green wrote:
> Psychologists, sad to say, have often been a little over-reaching in
> their assertions of certainty, and so have occasionally claimed "laws" > in
> an attempt to boost their scientific status.
Such is the case for the Yerkes-Dodson Law, whi
Surely there are laws in other fields; e.g. Boyle’s law for
gasses; the laws of thermodynamics; the law of gravity; the inverse square law
of light. It would seem that a law should be able to be defined and not at the
whim of whomever: Something like a relationship between variables which is
co
At 10:03 PM 8/12/2008, you wrote:
>Surely there are laws in other fields; e.g.
>Boyles law for gasses; the laws of
>thermodynamics; the law of gravity; the inverse
>square law of light. It would seem that a law
>should be able to be defined and not at the whim
>of whomever: Something like a
Stuart McKelvie:
>I wonder if he or someone else can enlighten us if physics
>has a special meaning for "law"?
Chris Green:
>Darwin's and Einstein's "theories" are far broader and scope
>and far more firmly established than *anything* in psychology,
>and yet they are not called "laws." More tha
I made a slip in the last sentence of my previous posting. It should have
read:
But from a teaching perspective it would seem a bit odd (to me at least) to
present the above relationship as "Boyle's theory", which has a connotation
of some uncertainty which is not warranted (as a generalisation th
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