Philosophical Foundations of Psychology

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Definitions about different terms in the philosophy of psychology
Steph M
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Steph M
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Epistemology Deals with the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge - States that knowledge entails beliefs, one's statement of belief cannot conflict with one's knowledge
Propositional Knowledge (Epistemology) Can be thought of "knowledge that" as opposed to "knowledge how". e.g. it is knowledge that 1+1=2
Personal Knowledge (Epistemology) Personal knowledge is gained experimentally e.g. The theoretical knowledge of the physics involved in maintaining a state of balance when riding a bike cannot be substituted for the practical (personal) knowledge gained when practising
Tenacity (Epistemology) Accept as truth ideas that have been around a long time, or have been repeated over an over again e.g. Everyone knows the world is flat and if you go too far you'll fall off the edge
Intuition (Epistemology) Knowledge is gained without effort, and without the sensory systems e.g. Woman's intuition, psychic or religious revelation
Authority (Epistemology) Knowledge is derived from others who are presumed to have direct access to truth e.g. How many teeth does a horse have? Either look it up in Aristotle or look in the horse's mouth... everyone knows its better to get it straight from the horse's mouth
Rationalism (Reason) (Epistemology) Knowledge can be gained through the reasoning (logical) process alone e.g. Socrates is a man, all men are mortal, therefore Socrates is mortal
Empiricism (Epistemology) Knowledge is gained through our sensory mechanisms "I won't believe it unless I see it" e.g. The sun will rise tomorrow
Science (Epistemology) Combines the methods of rationalism and empiricism, knowledge is gained through systematic observation, agreed methodology, sceptical analysis and verification of all claims e.g. Discovery of the genetic code
Common Sense Is often based on rationality and direct observation, but in many ways it is "non-scientific"
Karl Popper Developed the idea of falsifiability as a criterion for scientific validity
Truth The account of facts which has as yet not been proven to be untrue
Inductive Process Reasoning from particular to general e.g. Scientists may observe instances of a natural phenomenon and derive a general law (inductive)
Deduction Process Reasoning from general to particular e.g Start with a theory and look for instances that confirm this (deduction)
The Scientific Method Involves collecting data in a controlled, objective way; and then developing theories on the basis of that evidence, using induction and deduction
Hypothetico-deductive Method (i.e. The Scientific Method) 1. Observe regularities 2. Develop a theory 3. Develop a prediction 4. Test the prediction 5. Evaluate the theory
Experimental Control Is used to ensure that the only thing varying in an experiment is what we want to vary
Operationism Unobservable factors have observable consequences, so we can measure the unobservable by measuring the consequences
Operational Definition A definition that specifies the operations of measurement, if the operational definition is not reliable then the association between variables is equally unreliable
Artefacts Are unwanted effects in psychology studies that influence people's behaviour, typically come from either the participants or the investigators
Participant Artefacts Come about because participants try to guess what a study is about, and change their behaviour accordingly
Experimenter Artefacts Come about from the features or behaviour of the investigator. There are several types of experimenter effects: Observer, interpreter, intentional, expectancy
Reification (Issue) Occurs when we develop a measure that seems successful, and assume our original construct actually exists: it may not
Design of Measures (Issue) An issue to the extent that someone has to choose what counts when measuring something
Multi Measures (Issue) A given construct can be measured in many different ways
Primary Analysis The analysis of data from a single study to test the hypotheses originally formulated
Secondary Analysis The re-analysis of data from a single study to test new hypotheses or to apply more appropriate statistical procedures to test the original hypotheses
Meta-Analysis The application of statistical procedures to examine tests of a common hypothesis from more than one study "The analysis of analyses" Attempts to apply to a collection of studies the same methodological rigor and statistical precision ordinarily found in primary research
Aggregating Studies Aggregation simply requires that we convert each study outcome to a standard metric. It provides an overall test of the common hypothesis
Thomas Kuhn Makes the argument that science is not hewn from falsification but is learned by scientists becoming familiar with the successful applications of theory... it is learned by example
Paradigm Is a body of language, shared precepts, theory and methods
Scientific Paradigm Involves a scientific theory with significant explanatory and predictive power
Anomaly Accumulation Instances which the theory fails to explain, or can only explain by postulating ever-more embellishments
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