Reviews the book, Psychology and the Liberal Consensus by Charles C. Anderson and L. D. Travis (1983). In Psychology and the Liberal Consensus savage criticisms are leveled at areas of psychology including cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, artificial intelligence, social psychology, educational psychology, behaviorism, the study of personality, and the psychology of intelligence measurement. The central thesis of the book is that for at least the past century American social policy has been guided by a (presumably false) liberal consensus and that psychology has been a servant to this consensus. According to Psychology and the Liberal Consensus, psychology has contributed to this conception by claiming to be a natural scienc...
Critique of the moral and political implications of psychological theory and practice has gathered f...
A commonly told story about the history of psychology goes like this. Psychology began as a science ...
We are currently witnessing radical changes in the science of psychology. The author believes that t...
LeShan laments both the condition of psychotherapeutic practice and the fact that psychologists have...
Reviews the book, Relations and Representations: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Social Psychol...
Psychological insight is the creed of our time. A quiet academic discipline two generations ago, psy...
Book synopsis: What does critical psychology mean? How and why have many psychologists come to thin...
An important volume, it represents the first systematic insinuation of postmodern critical thought i...
Originally published in Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 1996, Vol 41(12), 1196-1197. T...
Does mainstream psychology offer us a 'true' insight into human nature? Or are current psychological...
Evolutionary psychologists are personally liberal, just as social psychologists are. Yet their resea...
Data indicate that large percentages of the general public regard psychology’s scientific status wit...
This volume has the lofty aim of inspiring all of us involved in passing on knowledge about psycholo...
This issue of the Psychological Review is the first issue of the first century of the new millennium...
What does morality have to do with psychology in a value-neutral, postmodern world? According to a p...
Critique of the moral and political implications of psychological theory and practice has gathered f...
A commonly told story about the history of psychology goes like this. Psychology began as a science ...
We are currently witnessing radical changes in the science of psychology. The author believes that t...
LeShan laments both the condition of psychotherapeutic practice and the fact that psychologists have...
Reviews the book, Relations and Representations: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Social Psychol...
Psychological insight is the creed of our time. A quiet academic discipline two generations ago, psy...
Book synopsis: What does critical psychology mean? How and why have many psychologists come to thin...
An important volume, it represents the first systematic insinuation of postmodern critical thought i...
Originally published in Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 1996, Vol 41(12), 1196-1197. T...
Does mainstream psychology offer us a 'true' insight into human nature? Or are current psychological...
Evolutionary psychologists are personally liberal, just as social psychologists are. Yet their resea...
Data indicate that large percentages of the general public regard psychology’s scientific status wit...
This volume has the lofty aim of inspiring all of us involved in passing on knowledge about psycholo...
This issue of the Psychological Review is the first issue of the first century of the new millennium...
What does morality have to do with psychology in a value-neutral, postmodern world? According to a p...
Critique of the moral and political implications of psychological theory and practice has gathered f...
A commonly told story about the history of psychology goes like this. Psychology began as a science ...
We are currently witnessing radical changes in the science of psychology. The author believes that t...