How to Think Straight About Psychology (10e)

How to Think Straight About Psychology (10e) pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2025

出版者:Pearson
作者:Keith E·Stanovich
出品人:
页数:256
译者:
出版时间:2012-10-1
价格:GBP 40.99
装帧:Paperback
isbn号码:9780205945757
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 心理学
  • 科普
  • 方法论
  • 思维
  • 心理
  • 英文版
  • 管理
  • 技术
  • 心理学
  • 思维
  • 认知
  • 科学
  • 学习
  • 教育
  • 思维训练
  • 心理学入门
  • 理性思考
  • 批判性思维
想要找书就要到 小美书屋
立刻按 ctrl+D收藏本页
你会得到大惊喜!!

具体描述

Teaching students to become better consumers of psychological research.

Keith Stanovich's widely used and highly acclaimed book presents a short introduction to the critical thinking skills that will help students to better understand the subject matter of psychology. How to Think Straight about Psychology, 10e helps students recognize pseudoscience and be able to distinguish it from true psychological research, aiding students to become more discriminating consumers of psychological information.

作者简介

Keith E. Stanovich is currently Emeritus Professor of Human Development and Applied Psychology at the University of Toronto. He is the author of over 175 scientific articles and seven books. Stanovich is the 2012 recipient of the E. L. Thorndike Career Achievement Award from the American Psychological Association and the recipient of the 2010 Grawemeyer Award in Education. In 2000 he received the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading. Stanovich is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association (Divisions 3, 7, 8, and 15) and the Association for Psychological Science.

目录信息

Preface xi
1 Psychology Is Alive and Well (and Doing Fine Among the Sciences) 1
The Freud Problem 1
The Diversity of Modern Psychology 3
Implications of Diversity 4
Unity in Science 6
What, Then, Is Science? 8
Systematic Empiricism 9
Publicly Verifiable Knowledge: Replication and Peer Review 10
Empirically Solvable Problems: Scientists’ Search
for Testable Theories 12
Psychology and Folk Wisdom: The Problem
with “Common Sense” 13
Psychology as a Young Science 17
Summary 18
2 Falsifiability: How to Foil Little Green Men in the Head 21
Theories and the Falsifiability Criterion 22
The Theory of Knocking Rhythms 23
Freud and Falsifiability 24
The Little Green Men 26
Not All Confirmations Are Equal 28
Falsifiability and Folk Wisdom 29
The Freedom to Admit a Mistake 29
Thoughts Are Cheap 32
Errors in Science: Getting Closer to the Truth 33
Summary 36
3 Operationism and Essentialism: “But, Doctor,
What Does It Really Mean?” 37
Why Scientists Are Not Essentialists 37
Essentialists Like to Argue About the Meaning of Words 38 Operationists Link Concepts to Observable Events 39
Reliability and Validity 40
Direct and Indirect Operational Definitions 42
Scientific Concepts Evolve 43
Operational Definitions in Psychology 45
Operationism as a Humanizing Force 47
Essentialist Questions and the Misunderstanding of Psychology 49
Summary 51
4 Testimonials and Case Study Evidence:
Placebo Effects and the Amazing Randi 53
The Place of the Case Study 54
Why Testimonials Are Worthless: Placebo
Effects 56
Contents vii
The “Vividness” Problem 59
The Overwhelming Impact of the Single Case 62
The Amazing Randi: Fighting Fire with Fire 64
Testimonials Open the Door to Pseudoscience 65
Summary 71
5 Correlation and Causation: Birth Control by the Toaster Method 73
The Third-Variable Problem: Goldberger and Pellagra 74
Why Goldberger’s Evidence Was Better 75
The Directionality Problem 78
Selection Bias 79
Summary 83
6 Getting Things Under Control: The Case of Clever Hans 85
Snow and Cholera 86
Comparison, Control, and Manipulation 87
Random Assignment in Conjunction with Manipulation Defines the True Experiment 88
The Importance of Control Groups 90
The Case of Clever Hans, the Wonder Horse 95
Clever Hans in the 1990s 97
Prying Variables Apart: Special Conditions 100
Intuitive Physics 102
Intuitive Psychology 103
Summary 106
7 “But It’s Not Real Life!”: The “Artificiality” Criticism and Psychology 107
Why Natural Isn’t Always Necessary 107
The “Random Sample” Confusion 108
The Random Assignment Versus Random Sample Distinction 109
Theory-Driven Research Versus Direct Applications 110
Applications of Psychological Theory 115
The “College Sophomore” Problem 117
The Real-Life and College Sophomore Problems in Perspective 120
Summary 121
8 Avoiding the Einstein Syndrome: The Importance of Converging Evidence 123
The Connectivity Principle 124
A Consumer’s Rule: Beware of Violations of Connectivity 125
The “Great-Leap” Model Versus the Gradual-Synthesis Model 126
Converging Evidence: Progress Despite Flaws 128
Converging Evidence in Psychology 130
Scientific Consensus 134
Methods and the Convergence Principle 136
The Progression to More Powerful Methods 137
A Counsel Against Despair 139
Summary 142
9 The Misguided Search for the “Magic Bullet”: The Issue of Multiple Causation 143
The Concept of Interaction 144
The Temptation of the Single-Cause Explanation 147
Summary 150
10 The Achilles’ Heel of Human Cognition: Probabilistic Reasoning 151
“Person-Who” Statistics 153
Probabilistic Reasoning and the Misunderstanding of Psychology 154
Psychological Research on Probabilistic Reasoning 156
Insufficient Use of Probabilistic Information 157
Failure to Use Sample-Size Information 159
The Gambler’s Fallacy 161
A Further Word About Statistics and Probability 163
Summary 165
11 The Role of Chance in Psychology 167
The Tendency to Try to Explain Chance Events 167
Explaining Chance: Illusory Correlation and the Illusion of Control 170
Chance and Psychology 172
Coincidence 172
Personal Coincidences 175
Accepting Error in Order to Reduce Error:Clinical Versus Actuarial Prediction 176
Summary 183
12 The Rodney Dangerfield of the Sciences 185
Psychology’s Image Problem 185
Psychology and Parapsychology 186
The Self-Help Literature 188
Recipe Knowledge 190
Psychology and Other Disciplines 192
Our Own Worst Enemies 193
Isn’t Everyone a Psychologist? Implicit Theories of Behavior 199
The Source of Resistance to Scientific Psychology 200
The Final Word 205
References 207
Credits 229
Name Index 230
Subject Index 237
· · · · · · (收起)

读后感

评分

简评:第七版曾叫做《与“众”不同的心理学》,这本书的重点在介绍如何用科学的思维来认识心理学,与其说是心理学,不如说是方法论、科学哲学。书中介绍了理论必须是可证伪和可验证的,验证是说要可测量与可操作,公开知识须经过同行评审;不要搞错相关与因果关系;警惕个案与...  

评分

时常有人问我,什么是心理学? . 色彩星座、催眠读心、潜能开发、心理操纵、成功学等等,这些东西是心理学吗? . 心理学是否等同于弗洛伊德?是否专门训练心理咨询师?又是否等同于心灵鸡汤、人生哲理?如果可能,我会推荐他们去看这本书:《这才是心理学》。 . 心理学是一门研...  

评分

本书和《心理学的40项研究》是我见过心理学书籍里的两个极端。前者只讲HOW,心理学研究是如何做的,所有的研究成果不过是用于讲解方法时所举的例证;后者只讲WHAT,心理学研究有哪些牛掰的成果,所有关于方法和过程的描述不过是用来支持成果的合理性。虽然大相径庭,两本书却同...  

评分

简谈stanovich与《How to Think Straight about Psycology》 Stanovich最被人熟知的作品是《这才是心理学》,但他的理性三部曲才算是他的思想结晶。但不得不说,Stanovich 于我有很多特殊意义。 接触到的第一本stanovich的作品必然是《对伪心理学说不》,这本书让迷茫的我有了...  

评分

模仿梁文道的风格写个书评。 原文地址 我们知道最近一段时间,诺贝尔哥郭英森几年前在《非你莫属》的一段节目被挖出来了,因为他在里面提到了引力波——今年春节我们终于找到了引力波,这个在几十年前被爱因斯坦预言的物理现象。关于这件事情的讨论在知乎、朋友圈和微博都火了...  

用户评价

评分

简明读物,十分有趣。一下子觉得可以重新看起Statistics了。

评分

简明读物,十分有趣。一下子觉得可以重新看起Statistics了。

评分

简明读物,十分有趣。一下子觉得可以重新看起Statistics了。

评分

只读过半本《科学哲学》的人往往喜欢对这一类科普书籍吹毛求疵

评分

只读过半本《科学哲学》的人往往喜欢对这一类科普书籍吹毛求疵

本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度google,bing,sogou

© 2025 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有