More than 40 years ago, Paul Meehl (1978) published a seminal critique of the state of theorizing in psychological science. According to Meehl, the quality of theories had diminished in the preceding decades, resulting in statistical methods standing in for theoretical rigor. In this introduction to the special issue Theory in Psychological Science, we apply Meehl’s account to contemporary psychological science. We suggest that by the time of Meehl’s writing, psychology found itself in the midst of a crisis that is typical of maturing sciences, in which the theories that had been guiding research were gradually cast into doubt. Psychologists were faced with the same general choice when worldviews fail: Face reality and pursue knowledge in t...
In recent years, a growing chorus of researchers has argued that psychological theory is in a state ...
The principal goal of psychological science is not application but theory. This is because a good th...
This book revisits psychology’s appropriation of natural scientific methods. The author argues that,...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
Because physical theories typically predict numerical values, an improvement in ex-perimental precis...
The “replication crisis” may well be the single most important challenge facing empirical psychologi...
In his landmark 1978 paper, Paul Meehl delineated, with remarkable clarity, some fundamental challen...
One of the original aims of this journal was to promote theory in psychology. Nowadays more and more...
This chapter considers various factors that have been responsible for the comparatively slow develop...
The dominant belief is that science progresses by testing theories and moving towards theoretical co...
The dominant belief is that science progresses by testing theories and moving towards theoretical co...
For almost half a century, Paul Meehl educated psychologists about how the mindless use of null-hypo...
Over its brief history, the discipline of psychology has seen its fair share of crises (Farr, 1991)....
In recent years, a growing chorus of researchers has argued that psychological theory is in a state ...
The principal goal of psychological science is not application but theory. This is because a good th...
This book revisits psychology’s appropriation of natural scientific methods. The author argues that,...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
Because physical theories typically predict numerical values, an improvement in ex-perimental precis...
The “replication crisis” may well be the single most important challenge facing empirical psychologi...
In his landmark 1978 paper, Paul Meehl delineated, with remarkable clarity, some fundamental challen...
One of the original aims of this journal was to promote theory in psychology. Nowadays more and more...
This chapter considers various factors that have been responsible for the comparatively slow develop...
The dominant belief is that science progresses by testing theories and moving towards theoretical co...
The dominant belief is that science progresses by testing theories and moving towards theoretical co...
For almost half a century, Paul Meehl educated psychologists about how the mindless use of null-hypo...
Over its brief history, the discipline of psychology has seen its fair share of crises (Farr, 1991)....
In recent years, a growing chorus of researchers has argued that psychological theory is in a state ...
The principal goal of psychological science is not application but theory. This is because a good th...
This book revisits psychology’s appropriation of natural scientific methods. The author argues that,...