Psychology A Science in Conflict
Psychology A Science in Conflict
Psychology A Science in Conflict
Kendler
SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HISTORY division REF
The Chicago Public Library
Received-
BF Kendlert Howard
38 Harvardf 1919—
• K43
Psychology
https://archive.0rg/detaiis/psychoiogysciencOOOOkend
Psychology: A Science in Conflict
Psychology:
A Science in Conflict
HOWARD H. KENDLER
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Contents
9. Postscript, 371
References, 372
Index, 385
To those echoes of the past
that still ring clearly.
Dedicated to the memory of my brother
Joel J. Kendler (1918-1935)
Psychology: A Science in Conflict
Plans and Purposes 1
1. Several interpretations of the nature of psychology are possible. An
understanding of contemporary psychology demands an appreciation
of both the different methodological assumptions that underlie various
interpretations and the distinctive kinds of knowledge they produce.
Such clarification can best be accomplished by analyzing psychology
as it is rather than as it should be. In this chapter the orienting atti¬
tudes of the proposed epistemological analysis are described.
PROBLEMS
3
4 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
PROLOGUE
18
14 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
they all deal with some aspect of the world of human experience.”
Pratt, expressing a position consistent with methodological be¬
haviorism (Bergmann, 1956), a position that asserts that behavior
can be investigated and explained without direct examination of
mental states, writes: “No science is capable of definition in terms
of subject matter, for the subject matter of all sciences is the
same. Some person, some scientist, makes a report on something
which he has observed . . . The physical sciences, the biological
sciences, and the mental sciences all make use of the same ob¬
servational data. Psychology is a division of scientific labor, not a
subject matter” (1939, pp. 22-32).
How can such agreement be achieved by methodological
positions—structuralism and behaviorism—that expound such con¬
trasting views of the subject matter of psychology? This agree¬
ment is partly illusory because it stems from the failure to distin¬
guish between two possible meanings of the term subject matter.
Both Titchener and Pratt use subject matter to refer to the data
base of science, and both reach the same conclusion that the rock-
bottom foundation of all sciences is the phenomenal experience
of the observing scientist. But subject matter can be interpreted
within another context, that of characterizing the phenomena that
identify a discipline. Just as a course in French has a different
subject matter than a course in German, so does physics possess
a different subject matter than psychology. Although students in
introductory French and German courses are both learning,
among other things, to associate foreign words with their English
equivalents, the types of words involved are different. Similarly,
investigating the speed with which balls roll down an inclined
plane or the trajectory of a spacecraft involves a different set of
events than the study of a dog salivating to a tone or an adult
human solving a mathematical problem. The former deals with
the movements of inanimate objects while the latter deals with
the behavior of organisms, a discrimination that can be made in
a highly reliable fashion.
It could be argued, although not very persuasively, that the
behavior of organisms cannot be distinguished fundamentally
from physical principles that govern objects in motion because
18 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
the initial concern was with the mind followed by a shift of in¬
terest to behavior. This analysis begins in the opposite order first
because the problems of analyzing public behavior are simpler
than treating private experience and second because some special
problems of analyzing private experience can be illuminated by
knowledge of the methods used to describe behavior.
Defining Behavior
the correct response “by trial and error with accidental success”
(1898, p. 105). A cat, for example, tried a variety of responses
such as pressing against the door, sticking its paw through the
slats, and other “erroneous” acts that failed to open the door.
Then by “accident” it would emit the appropriate instrumental
response, escape, and consume the food.
Gestalt psychologists argued that there was no meaningful
relationship between the act of pressing the platform and escap¬
ing from the box. There was no more reason to press on the
platform than to insert the paw through the slats or lie down.
Instead, meaningful behavior depends upon being able to per¬
ceive the rational relationship between the structure of the prob¬
lem and the behavior required to solve it. Problem solving de¬
pends upon understanding, not “accidental success.” An example
of a meaningful problem is the task employed by Kohler (1925)
in studying insight. In one of his experiments a banana was sus¬
pended from the top of a cage out of a chimpanzee’s reach. Sev¬
eral boxes were scattered around the floor. The animal repeatedly
jumped for the fruit without success. Eventually these futile leaps
ceased, giving way to restless pacing. Then according to the re¬
port, the pacing stopped, and after some apparent contemplation
the animal pushed the boxes below the banana and stacked them,
enabling him to climb to the top and grab the fruit.
Kohler used the term insight to describe the problem-solving
behavior of his chimpanzees. He assumed that insight was a con¬
sequence of a sudden change in the chimpanzee’s perception of
the problem. Instead of seeing the boxes and banana as isolated
objects, the chimpanzee suddenly perceived them as related parts
of the problem. As a result of insight (perceptual reorganization)
problem solution occurred.
Gestalt psychologists essentially argued that a qualitative dif¬
ference existed between learning based upon an arbitrary asso¬
ciation and learning resulting from understanding rational rela¬
tionships. An organism from his knowledge of the world had no
reason to expect that the pressing of the platform would lead to
escape, but he could anticipate that stacking the boxes would
enable him to grab the bananas. The implication of this position
82 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
with an eye to control it. This, of course, does not rule out the pos¬
sibility that a more suitable and fruitful behavioral classification
than the direct-indirect system can be developed in the future.
Phenomenology or Phenomenologies?
it means that for the active researcher and theorist, viewing the
methodological issues within a restricted psychological frame¬
work may have special advantages/
Observational Purity
8. Kanner’s study (1958) had little impact upon the latent learning
controversy because at the time of its publication, interest in the problem
had petered out as a consequence of the exhaustion of the combatants. As a
result, a study for which I had predicted instant notoriety largely went un¬
noticed. Kanner still has 273 reprints of the 300 I encouraged him to
purchase.
The Data Base and Subject Matter of Psychology: 1 51
Figure 2.1
odological rule that will guarantee, either for the empirical inves¬
tigator or the scholar who is attempting to reconstruct knowl¬
edge, the complete separation of observational events from theo¬
retical conceptions. Therefore, I am forced to entertain the possi¬
bility that perhaps in some empirical areas that the observational-
theoretical distinction may be difficult, or even impossible, to
maintain.
Accepting this possibility raises the question as to whether
the distinction loses all relevance to scientific practice. If some
notion is not completely right must it be completely wrong? Con¬
sider this problem within the practical framework of building a
boat with primitive equipment that is irtadequate to the task of
preventing all leaks; one would nevertheless make every eflFort to
minimize potential leaks. Is not the scientist confronted with a
similar problem? His tools of epistemological analysis are inade¬
quate but he nevertheless strives, as best he can, to keep his ob¬
servational statements uncontaminated.
Nagel expresses a similar point of view:
nitude, the accuracy of that observation is based upon the validity of the
theoretical principles of physics, which are assumed to account for the func¬
tioning of the equipment. In this context every observational statement is
influenced by theoretical preconceptions. But these theoretical preconceptions
are not those under investigation and hence are not relevant to the significant
issue of whether observational statements are contaminated by those theo¬
retical principles that are being investigated.
The Data Base and Subject Matter of Psychology: 1 61
the same event but instead they bring into existence diflFerent
phenomenal events. If true, then we really do not have diflFerent
phenomenological methods but instead diflFerent phenomenolo-
gies in the sense that diflFerent experiential worlds are created by
diflFerent methods of phenomenological exploration.^®
In rebuttal, it might be argued that the same situation pre¬
vails in behavioral psychology; theoretical preconceptions de¬
termine what is observed. For example, if one assumes that move¬
ments are learned in instrumental conditioning, then one observes
the manner in which an animal presses a bar; but if one assumes
that acts are acquired, then one notes only whether the bar is de¬
pressed. Such an argument overlooks' fundamental diflFerences
between behavioral and experiential observations. In the example
cited it would be possible to observe both events (movements
and acts) simultaneously, achieve inter subjective agreement
about the observational events, and ultimately determine the rel¬
ative merits of the competing conceptions of instrumental con¬
ditioning. None of these would be possible in pure phenomenol-
ogy; the intrasubjectivity of the experiential event prohibits re¬
cordings of the event, intersubjective agreement about its occur¬
rence, and resolution of theoretical diflFerences.
If one denies the pertinence of the observational-theoretical
distinction to behavioral psychology, one need not be compelled
to accept a methodological equivalence between pure phenome-
nology and behavioral psychology. One can acknowledge that the
theoretical disputes in experiential psychology bear a resem¬
blance to those in behavioral psychology in that they emerge
from contamination of observational data by theoretical precon¬
ceptions. At the same time one can recognize that the contamina¬
tion can be qualitatively diflFerent or significantly greater in one
case than in the other. If this is true, then one would expect that
history would demonstrate that agreement about observational
events would be more diflBcult to achieve in experiential psychol¬
ogy than in behavioral psychology. I would suggest that histori¬
cal evidence supports this expectation.
Shared Experience
66
The Data Base and Subject Matter of Psychology: 2 67
Metaphysical Behaviorism
Epiphenomenalism
ports can have heuristic value and then argue that important
behavioral processes can be absent from such reports and that
they can actually be misleading. Although these two conclusions
are in opposition they are not contradictory for the simple reason
that no single relationship operates for all cases in which com¬
parisons are made between introspective reports and behavior.
The two in some cases can dovetail, in others be related, and still
in others be antagonistic. A uniform strategy for dealing with
introspective reports in a behavioral analysis would therefore be
unwise.
Behavioral psychologists have a variety of strategies to
choose from in dealing with introspective evidence. They range
from one extreme of ignoring it to the other of using it for con¬
structing a theoretical model of conscious experience. In evaluat¬
ing such strategies three important principles must be remem¬
bered for dealing with introspective evidence within a behavioral
framework: (1) the ultimate value of the strategy must be dem¬
onstrated rather than prejudged; (2) phenomenal experiences
must be considered an inferred construct and not basic datum;
and (3) introspective evidence need not reflect fundamental be¬
havioral processes (and vice versa). In regard to the final point,
Tolman, one of the leading theorists in the early history of cogni¬
tive psychology, oflFered the following warning about the value of
introspection for formulating theoretical constructs, which he re¬
ferred to as intervening variables:
Is not introspection after all, at least in the case of men, a signifi¬
cant method by which one can get at and define these intervening
variables in a direct and really reliable fashion? I doubt it. I be¬
lieve that introspection is a form of social response—a type of
final behavior . . . one which has very complicated conditions.
. . . The very essence of introspection lies in the fact that it is a
response to audiences—external and internal. And such being the
case, it seems less likely to mirror most types of intervening vari¬
able so directly and correctly as do more gross nonsocial forms
of behavior (1936, p. lOI).
The conclusion thus far is that two distinct and legitimate subject
matters are available for study, conscious experience and objec-
The Data Base and Subject Matter of Psychology: 2 87
OPERATIONISM
Operational Meaning
Empirical Meaning
Intuitive Meaning
Theoretical Meaning
SUMMARY
100
On Understanding: 1 101
DEDUCTIVE EXPLANATION
About thirty years ago there was much talk that geologists ought
only to observe and not theorize, and I well remember someone
saying that at this rate a man might as well go into a gravelpit
and count the pebbles and describe the colours. How odd it is
that anyone should not see all observations must be for or against
some view—if it is to be of any service (Darwin, 1903, p. 195).
time and effort? When can the theorist and the entire scientific
community decide that a research program should be abandoned?
Implicit in these questions are two related issues: (1) the
evaluation of a research program and (2) the decision to aban¬
don it. Lakatos (1970a, 1970b) has suggested that a research pro¬
gram can be judged in terms of its historical development, par¬
ticularly in terms of whether it is progressive or degenerating.
Consider the specific case of an anomalous result that cannot be
integrated within a particular theory of a given research pro¬
gram. A progressive change would occur when an ad hoc modifi¬
cation of the theory not only copes with the anomalous result but
also predicts the occurrence of a novel event. In contrast, a re¬
search program is degenerating if an ad hoc modification does
nothing more than accommodate the anomaly. Thus a progressive
program is one in which modifications in the theoretical structure
are accompanied by an expansion in its explanatory capacity
while a degenerating program is one that repeatedly adds ad hoc
theoretical assumptions in order to cope with embarrassing evi¬
dence.
However, the evaluation of the historical development is
more complex than has just been suggested. Progressive changes
can occur when dealing with some anomalous results but not
with others. As a result, a simple verdict of "progressive” or "de¬
generating” may be hard to arrive at when evaluating a particu¬
lar research program at a given time in its history. In addition, a
research program is not evaluated in isolation. It is evaluated in
comparison to competing programs. When compared to degen¬
erating programs a particular research program that achieves
modest progressive successes may be strongly supported but may
be largely ignored when pitted against a competitor that is
achieving dramatic progress. Finally, it must be emphasized that
the characteristic that Lakatos selects to define progressive—the
prediction of novel events—need not be accepted as an ultimate
criterion. One might argue that theoretical precision is more im¬
portant than empirical generality. There is nothing intrinsic in
the scientific enterprise to suggest that one is more important
than the other, and consequently, one cannot demand that pro-
148 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
152
On Understanding: 2 158
sciences. Intuitive knowing is employed as a criterion of understand-
ing more frequently than psychologists like to admit, especially when
dealing with complex topics that involve both psychological and phil¬
osophical components (e.g., “the image of man’).
INTERPRETIVE CONSISTENCY
man is the only member of the animal kingdom who murders for
the sake of killing while simultaneously predieting that members
of other speeies also behave similarly.
Consisteney, in the logieal sense, must be distinguished from
truth, in the empirical sense. A mathematical system, for exam¬
ple, could be logically consistent but have no truth value because
it is not coordinated to events in the empirical world. But more
significant for our present concern is the case of formulations that
have apparent empirical relevance but whose empirical implica¬
tions cannot be rigorously tested. That is, some psychological in¬
terpretations are formulated in such a manner, not necessarily de¬
liberately, as to protect them from possible falsification. In spite
of this, the formulation provides an apparently consistent inter¬
pretation of a particular empirical realm. This is not to say that
the conception can be expressed in a strict logical form. Instead,
it is limited to informal conceptions expressed in common lan¬
guage that give the impression of hanging together. The most
notable examples of interpretive consistency in the absence of de¬
monstrable empirical validity are various psychoanalytic interpre¬
tations of personality development.
If Freudian theory, for example, were judged by the de¬
mands of a deductive model of explanation, it would be found
wanting. Nagel summarizes his methodological analysis of Freud¬
ian theory by concluding that “as a body of doctrine for which
factual validity can be reasonably claimed, I can only echo the
Scottish verdict: Not proven” (1959, p. 55). It would be difficult
to disagree with such a conclusion if one insists that factual valid¬
ity can only be achieved by a formulation that meets the de¬
mands of a deductive model of explanation. Freudian theory falls
short of this requirement because it lacks any precision in its de¬
ductive capacity; any and all kinds of behavior appear consistent
with it. One reason for this is that Freudian theory is filled with
processes and mechanisms (e.g., id versus superego) that operate
antagonistically. Because their mode of functioning is not pre¬
cisely stated, a Freudian theorist, with a modicum of ingenuity,
has license to offer a consistent interpretation of any form of be¬
havior occurring under any set of conditions. If the pleasure prin-
On Understanding: 2 155
ciple proves inadequate to explain a given form of behavior, the
death wish can be invoked. In addition, the same antecedent con¬
dition can predict all possible outcomes. A man’s unresolved Oe¬
dipus complex can explain such widely diverse behaviors as
homosexuality, marrying a woman who resembles his mother,
marrying a woman who is totally unlike his mother, not marry¬
ing, or avoiding all sexual contacts.
Postulating opposed processes by itself does not necessarily
produce laxness in predictability. Antagonistic processes operate,
for example, in motivational theories of hunger, which postulate
excitatory and inhibitory centers in the hypothalamus (Stellar,
1954; Teitelbaum, 1966) that, when operative, have the eflFect of
encouraging or discouraging eating. Because these centers are as¬
sumed to have diflEerent modes of control, one could manipulate
antecedent conditions in order to predict consequent behavior.
Freudian theory is incapable of doing this. No objective criteria
are available to determine the relative strengths of the antago¬
nistic processes and their mode of interaction. As a result rigorous
predictions about future behavior cannot be made, but consistent
interpretations of past behavior can be proposed. Rabbi David
Small, a fictional detective, expresses the same idea when ques¬
tioning the explanatory ability of psychologists :
This conclusion has stood the test of time. Little has been ac¬
complished in increasing the falsifiable potential of Freudian
theory.^ Instead the course of historical events has underlined the
els are the same, then one could argue that the supplementary in¬
terpretation provided by the stimulus-sampling notion was super¬
fluous. But viewing theories within a historical perspective would
that factors other than their deductive capacities can play
a role in their development. The stimulus-sampling interpretation
of learning has instrumental value; it provides the theorist with
an analogy for interpreting a variety of phenomena within a com¬
mon theoretical framework. Thus the supplementary interpreta¬
tion aids the theorist in his attempt to expand the empirical do¬
main of his formulation. In this function the stimulus-sampling
notion operates as a tool of thought for seeing similarities not
revealed by the mathematical representation.
At this point it will be advantageous to back off from specific
points and regain the appropriate perspective for viewing the
fundamental methodological issue. The line of analysis being pur¬
sued is that a difference exists between interpretive consistency
and deductive explanation. This difference is fairly obvious when
the criteria of the two are clearly distinguished as is the case for
Vico, who postulates different forms of understanding (verstehen
versus deductive explanation) for the human and physical sci¬
ences. The distinction becomes much hazier when an explicit dif¬
ference is denied as is the case when a theorist claims that the
standards of deductive explanation are met but the implications
of his conception, upon examination, prove to be immune to falsi¬
fication. It should be clear from previous discussions that the ar¬
gument is not that deductive explanations cannot be achieved in
the human and biological sciences but instead that other kinds of
understandings are possible. One major task in comprehending
psychological knowledge is to identify the criteria of understand¬
ing that is sought. Although many psychoanalytic theorists would
argue that their conceptions are of the natural-science variety, a
historical analysis of the claim suggests otherwise. This historical
failure does not deny that psychoanalytic explanations can be in¬
tellectually convincing.
Over and above all of the other virtues of (Freud’s) theory stands
this one—it tries to envisage a full-bodied individual living partly
in the world of reality and partly in the world of make-believe,
176 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
BEHAVIORAL CONTROL
INTUITIVE KNOWING
unless one has the eapacity to empathize with other human be¬
ings. Great literature, some would suggest, is ereated when the
author enables one to empathize with his eharaeters and thereby
share their experienees while simultaneously learning about one¬
self. Dostoievski and Bellow, for me, are partieularly eflFeetive in
this respeet.
My impression is that the intuitive knowing experienced when
reading literature is comparable to the experience of a clinician
when he empathizes with a patient. The relationship between the
two kinds of experience posed an interesting puzzle for me when
I was trying to decide whether to take an undergraduate major in
psychology. I was at that time enrolled in an introductory psy¬
chology course that had as its text John F. DashielFs Fundamen¬
tals of Objective Psychology. I was surprised and pleased with the
book because the intimate relationship between psychological
principles and experimental evidence was a new and intriguing
concept to me. All in all, psychology in 1938 appeared less vague
and more objective than other so-called social sciences, and from
my viewpoint, more appealing. This impression, however, was
badly shaken when I attended a symposium in which most of the
psychology department participated. The topic was “Human Na¬
ture, and without exception, each psychologist, to clarify his or her
position, quoted a passage from some great novel or poem. This
was confusing because I expected that their arguments would be
buttressed by experimental evidence. If literature was to be em¬
ployed to interpret psychological principles perhaps my interest
in psychology would be better served by majoring in English?
But that alternative had an apparent drawback because at that
time the leading lights of the English department were offering
psychoanalytic interpretations of literature!
In restrospect, that symposium was not as confusing as it ini¬
tially appeared. If one accepts the position that different modes
of understanding are possible, it should not be too surprising to
discover that more than one kind can be employed especially for
different occasions. Although one may be committed to explain
the maze behavior of rats by deductive explanation, one could
easily shift to the mode of intuitive knowing when confronted
192 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
Figure 5.1 A stimulus pattern (A) illustrating the principles of good form.
You tend to perceive this pattern as made up of the components in B, not
those in C.
On Understanding: 2 199
A B
Figure 5.2 Which form has a higher amount of '‘goodness? As the text
explains, form A is more redundant and hence is a “better^' figure.
ure A is redundant, e.g., if you know the upper half you can pre¬
dict the lower half. In essence, good forms are redundant because
the whole can be predicted from a few parts while poor forms
are unpredictable. This principle can be represented mathemati-
cally (Attneave, 1954; Garner, 1962). My concern, however, is
with the development of the meaning of the concept of good
form (pragnanz). Initially it was based upon intuitive knowing,
but later it could be described by objectively defined constructs.
This represents another example of intuitive knowing anticipating
future developments in a natural-science oriented psychology.
Before his death. Rabbi Zusya said, “In the coming world, they
will not ask me: ‘Why were you not Moses?’ They will ask me:
‘Why were you not Zusya?’ ” (Howe, 1976, p. 642).
disputes that plague psychology. Rather than insist that one form
of understanding is superior to others, it would be more useful to
recognize that different forms of understanding can be employed
and each can be defended for certain reasons and rejected for
The trial of Galileo, which led to the verdict that the sun re¬
volves around the earth, need not be considered as representative
of all judicial-scientific courts. The verdict in Galileo’s trial would
have probably been dififerent if the judges were qualified scien¬
tists instead of churchmen who believed that knowledge comes
from God or at least from religious authority. It can also be ar¬
gued that the judicial system of the sort that common and Roman
law encourages bears an intrinsic similarity to the scientific
method. I recall an attempt to disabuse introductory psychol¬
ogy students of common misconceptions about the nature of psy¬
chology. A warning was given that the course would be limited
to conclusions warranted by evidence and logic.” A perceptive
student noted that such a criterion had as much relevance to law
as to science.
The most revolutionary justifieation for arriving at warranted
scientific conclusions by judicial means is that the behavioral and
soeial seiences demand it. This thesis is advaneed by Levine
(1974), who questions the adequacy of experimental methods
and statistieal inference to deal with signifieant soeial phenomena
as they oecur in a natural setting. A research project, for exam¬
ple, cannot employ random assignment when comparing the be¬
haviors of ‘ sehizophrenics and the brain damaged, ... the alien¬
ated with the unalienated, . . . aehievement test scores of blaek
and white children.” With such interests a researcher is eon-
fronted with a ehoice between employing inadequate natural-
scienee methods or developing “additional methods of approach
that are in their own right rigorous but appropriate to the sub-
214 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
stantive problems with which they deal.” Levine denies “that the
model of the laboratory experiment is the best if not the only way
of becoming certain of truth” and suggests that a “method based
on legal proceedings . . . may be suitable for many of psychoh
ogy's problems, in particular for field, clinical, and evaluative
studies.”
Levine should be given credit for offering an alternative to
more traditional scientific methods of arriving at warranted con¬
clusions. It is easy to criticize behavioristic methodologies for
their failure to provide unequivocal information that can be used
to solve significant social problems. It is also easy to state that
other methods are required. But what nqethods? At least he has
the courage to try to answer that question.
Levine’s position, however, is based on two questionable
premises. First, he equates natural-science methodology with
laboratory experimentation. Second, he denies that laboratory
phenomena in the behavioral sciences can reflect principles that
govern naturally occurring events. The history of physics fails to
jibe with these assumptions. Many warranted conclusions, emerg¬
ing within a deductive explanatory framework, have been arrived
at by the observations of natural events such as the motion of as¬
tronomical bodies. In addition, a productive interaction has fre¬
quently occurred between observations of natural events and the
results of laboratory studies. The history of the biological sci¬
ences fails to justify an antithesis between laboratory and natu¬
rally occurring events. Darwinian theory of evolution and its
subsequent impact on the experimental analysis of genetic de¬
termination underline the reciprocal relationship that can occur
between laboratory phenomena and natural events. I would like
to suggest that laboratory studies of individual differences and
the related development of psychological tests have led to a fun¬
damental understanding of individual differences in behavior in
social situations such as in schools and industry. There seems to
be no justification to limit the natural-science method to the
laboratory.
The failure to generalize from laboratory studies to complex
social situations may not represent any intrinsic limitation of the
On Understanding: 2
215
former but may instead be a consequence of any number of fac¬
tors such as lack of ingenuity in designing laboratory studies, in¬
adequate theorizing, unrealistic expectations, and a desire to solve
social issues that do not lend themselves purely to empirical reso¬
lution. We must also realize that some real-life events are too
complex for simple interpretations. Physicists cannot predict the
exact course that a leaf will take when descending in a wind-
stonn. Psychologists should not try to outperform physicists in
their theoretical predictions. And like physicists as well as weather¬
men, physicians, and surgeons, psychologists must frequently
couch their predictions in probability statements. Finally, there
may be problems, and social psychologists have exhibited a pen¬
chant for getting involved in them, that cannot be resolved by
empirical means. Solutions to many fundamental social issues that
surround problems such as poverty, race relations, minorities, and
others, will not emerge from empirical efforts alone.
I am not arguing that if we exclude unrealistic expectations
and avoid empirically unresolvable problems that theories based
on laboratory experiments will be able to make valid leaps to
real-life situations. I doubt if that will happen. My intuition is
that a closer reciprocal interaction between the laboratory and
natural events, of the sort that has taken place between ethology
and experimental comparative psychology, will be more produc¬
tive. Social psychologists too rapidly climbed on the method¬
ological bandwagon of small-group research believing that it
would automatically yield the basic principles of social behavior.
For many the behavior of the small group became an end in it¬
self, an encapsulated world isolated from the real one. Small-
group research generated many studies and much amusement
but little concern with whether it was dealing with social pro¬
cesses that operated in the natural environment. Yet there is no
reason to deny the possibility that laboratory studies can contrib¬
ute some understanding of individual and social events occurring
in the natural environment.
The core issue is whether truth can be adjudicated. In one
sense it can, if we accept the notion that the decision of a science
court will be legally binding on all. This would be one method of
216 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
217
218 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
and the pursuit of happiness. One can argue that a social policy
that endorses death, imprisonment, and denies the right to achieve
happiness is morally repugnant. The social consequences of such
policies, as in Nazi Germany, are so abhorrent that one need not
condemn them by reference to any higher moral authority or
principle. However, a more careful analysis suggests otherwise.
No matter how repugnant Nazi atrocities were, their moral re¬
jection is not fundamentally factual. Taking a life need not be
considered morally wrong. Many individuals who found Nazism
morally abhorrent would nevertheless condone a person’s right to
commit suicide, especially when succumbing to a painful terminal
illness. Some would also condone killing in a war that they
thought justified, as was the case for most Americans in World
W^ar II. Imprisonment would also be morally acceptable if it were
employed against a person who if free would probably commit a
felony. Nor would it be morally objectionable to deprive a sadist
of any opportunity to seek “happiness” by satisfying his motive.
The point is that facts of murder, imprisonment, and denial of
the pursuit of happiness do not logically lead to their moral re¬
jection. One must recognize that the abhorrence of Nazi atrocities
is not an expression of a true moral judgment but, instead, what
is considered to be a sound moral judgment. One could describe
the ethical principles that one has adopted and then recognize
that they are incompatible with Nazism. This leads to the sound
moral judgment that Nazism should be opposed because it is
morally repugnant. Just as was the case for deciding either to
abolish or to retain class distinctions, the facts themselves do not
lead logically to a moral imperative. The moral position one
adopts, whether one deals with “trivial” or “significant” facts, has
its origins in the ethical framework within which the facts are
judged.
the social treatment of the sexes. And this conclusion applies with
equal force to situations in which survival of the individual or the
society would be enhanced if sexual discrimination was practiced.
History is filled with incidents in which individuals (e.g., early
Christian martyrs) or groups (e.g., the Jews at Masada) decided
that some moral values were more important than survival itself.
The argument against the position that facts and values are
logically independent is that it fails to represent the realities of
science. According to the Sociobiology Study Group, a group of
scientists who vehemently criticized Wilson’s Sociobiology, scien¬
tific knowledge and political preconceptions are intertwined:
plained that as a child his schoolmates did not understand him. Unfortu¬
nately, the term racist today is widely employed as a weapon to intimidate
political opponents. Because the term possesses so many different meanings,
it is not clear what moral crime, if any, the victim of the accusation
committed.
250 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
ments are not possible. Data from experiments that are presumed
to be critical of a theory can be either incorporated into the the¬
ory by ad hoc assumptions or rejected by ad hoc arguments that
insist the study failed to meet the empirical specifications of the
theory.^
In the case of the competing research programs postulating
a genetic or purely environmental interpretation of black-white
differences in intelligence, the ideal of a critical-type experiment
is far removed from any reasonable approximation because of our
ignorance about several crucial factors: a full understanding of
possible environmental influences in IQ, a measure of an environ¬
ment’s level of intellectual stimulation, a satisfactory theory of
intelligence, knowing precisely the genetic determinants of in¬
telligence, and so on. As a result of a lack of sophistication the in¬
terpretations of any research finding are indecisive in regard to
the fundamental issue that is being debated. If this be true, two
questions immediately come to mind: “How can one make judg¬
ments about the validity of the competing theories?” and “What
is the sense of doing such research if individual studies cannot
yield unambiguous results?”
In regard to the first question, it does seem reasonable to as¬
sume that either the genetic-involvement or environmental-disad¬
vantage theory is valid or, as some might prefer to state, has a
greater verisimilitude. In order to make a decision in regard to
the competing theories, different participants in the controversy
have employed different criteria to support their judgments.
suffering of the blaek results from something over whieh he has no eontrol
while in the case of Uganda, assuming the victim was not a member of a
persecuted tribe, the punishment, even though unjustified, could in principle
have been avoided if the victim had behaved differently. Perhaps that is
why the genocide of the Armenians and European Jews appears to be more
of a heinous crime than government-inspired murders of political prisoners
even though the consequence for the victim is the same.
258 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
place. In addition to this plea for social fairness, one can also
argue that a balanced representation of racial and ethnic groups
“is a basic requirement for a democratie republic. Security of
person and property requires that each community have its share
of lawyers, teaehers, doetors, and professional experts” (Garcia,
1978).
One method of achieving balaneed representation of “each
community” is to employ an admission program into professional
sehools that will produce racial, ethnic, and sexual representation
in different professions approximately proportional to their num¬
bers in the population. Those in favor of sueh a plan frequently
employ such terms as goals and timetables to indicate that some
method that favorably weights minority membership should be
employed to increase the representation of members of that group.
The exaet proportion, as well as the target date to achieve it, is
somewhat elastie, but the purpose is clear that systems that do
not encourage the admission of minority groups are to be changed
to those that do. Some eritics, as well as some defenders, of the
proposal to have balanced representation have employed the
blunter, more preeise term quota to designate the goal of the pro¬
posed admission poliey—an exact proportion of a certain minority
must be admitted.
One procedure used to achieve balanced representation en¬
titles members of the minority group to receive special considera¬
tion for admission by being permitted to meet standards lower
than those for “majority” students. When this is done the problem
of separating questions of facts from those of values becomes very
subtle. For the most part values and facts have been conflated by
both proponents and erities of affirmative action programs. Al¬
though policy questions associated with these programs will ulti¬
mately be answered by judicial, legislative, and administrative
actions, psychologists can play a helpful role in making these po¬
litical decisions. A useful starting point for describing this role
will be a review and analysis of the well-publicized Bakke case.
both in 1973 and 1974 even though he would have been admitted
on the strength of his qualifications if he were black. (Bakke
scored in the 90th percentile in the medical college admission
test while the mean of the admitted minority students was below
the 50th percentile.) Sixteen of 100 places in the first-year class
had been set aside for disadvantaged students. The term disad¬
vantaged was not defined by economic criteria, it was based on
race and ethnic background.
The California Supreme Court ruled that this special admis¬
sion plan was unlawful since Bakke had been discriminated
against because of his race, in violation of the constitutional
guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment that no state should
‘‘deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws.” It should be noted that this ruling was not against
the special admission plan for minorities itself but was instead
against the manner in which it was formulated. If minority status
did not have a racial criterion the special admission policy would
have been legal. If, for example, minority status was defined in
terms of economic level, then the program would have been per¬
ceived by the court as constitutional. However, the university, in
appealing the court’s decision, noted that the entire purpose of
their affirmative action program would be defeated. If an eco¬
nomic criterion was employed less affluent whites would be sub¬
stituted for more affluent whites (thus creating a somewhat dif¬
ferent moral and legal issue). As a result of defining disadvan¬
taged status in economic terms, the University of California ar¬
gued that significant minority representation of blacks in medical
school education would not be achieved.
The United States Supreme Court, during 1978, in a set of
split (5 to 4) and hair-splitting decisions ruled that Bakke was re¬
jected from the medical school at the University of California,
Davis, on unconstitutional grounds and insisted he be admitted
into the next class. The court decided that setting aside a precise
number of places for racial minorities is unacceptable. The Su¬
preme Court of the United States, in these two decisions, agreed
with the ruling of the California Supreme Court. A sharp area of
disagreement occurred in the United States Supreme Court ruling
262 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
1. The claim that a moral basis for behavior can be derived from em¬
pirical evidence is examined. The argument is made that when psy¬
chologists attempt to establish an ethical imperative on the basis of
psychological data they are essentially offering themselves, or the dis¬
cipline of psychology, as a moral authority. The conclusion is drawn
that psychology is unable to offer an unqualified authority upon which
to base an ethical system to govern human behavior.
269
270 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
You can find the values by whieh mankind must live, and for
whieh man has always sought, by digging into the best people in
^ believe . . . that I ean find ultimate values which are
right for mankind by observing the best of mankind. ... If
under the best eonditions and in the best speeimens I simply
stand aside and describe in a seientifie way what these human
va^es are, I find values that are the old values of truth, goodness,
and beauty and some additional ones as well-for instance, eaietv
justiee, and joy (1961, pp. 5-6). >
The link between the empirieal evidenee and the ‘ right set
of values is not as direet as some would like to believe. In faet,
it is suggested that Maslow’s argument represents a simple tau¬
tology. Maslow seleets self-aetualizers who share his own per¬
sonal value system. He labels them as the “best,” and therefore
their ethieal commitments—his own, basically—become the ulti¬
mate values which are right for mankind.”
As noted previously (page 207), the concept of self-actual¬
ization is impregnated with value judgments. According to Plato,
people would realize their potentialities by conforming to the
ideal model of the human soul. Thomas^ Aquinas suggested that
human fulfillment could be secured by the practice of virtue and
by allegiance to the church and its sacraments. Johann Fichte
(1762-1814), a German idealist, provides an interesting and in¬
structive example of the potentials of a concept such as self-
actualization. While retaining the concept of self-realization
Fichte radically changed its meaning. Initially self-realization was
to be achieved by the acceptance of an austere moral code, then
by accepting the will of God, and finally by identifying with the
will of German nationalism, the latter formulation anticipating
the extreme national chauvinism of Nazism. And today, the Red
Brigade justifies its ruthless terrorism (e.g., “Kill a cop and go
home for dinner”) by appealing to the need for self-fulfillment.
Reforming present states, they argue, either in the direction of
liberal capitalism or democratic socialism, will not be sufficient
for developing a state dedicated to personal self-realization. Pres¬
ent states must be abolished, destroyed before that goal can be
achieved (Sheehan, 1979).
This analysis suggests that Maslow deluded himself into be¬
lieving that his proposed ethical system was demanded by psy¬
chological facts in contrast to other systems that depend on some
outside authority such as the church or the state. In truth, he was
only substituting the authority of the psychologist—in this case,
himself—for that of God or government. The difficulty with Mas-
low’s position, it must be underlined, is not with the values Mas¬
low chose to adopt, because psychologists, like other people, are
entitled to choose values they consider best. The fault is with the
Psychology and Values: 2 275
If there is no authority for moral values, and the moral values in¬
fluence the behavior of individuals and the functioning of society,
then humans must create their own values if they wish to control
their own destiny. It is not that the facts of psychology detncind
that individuals adopt a set of values and certainly not that they
adopt a specific ethical system. But it should be recognized that
individual and social behavior are different when moral codes are
operating than when they are not. For example, psychopathic
personalities without a concept of justice, cheat, deceive, and in
general exploit their fellow humans. In sharp contrast are individ¬
uals whose behavior is guided by moral principles. Similarly, the
Psychology and Values: 2
279
Moral Training
299
300 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
Most psychologists feel both secure and confident about the fu¬
ture of their discipline. Its growth has been phenomenal during
the past decades, illustrated by the increase of the membership of
the American Psychological Association (APA) from less than
1,000 in 1925 to well over 40,000 today. Concomitant growths
have also occurred in the number of publications and journals, as
well as in departments and schools that are offering doctorates in
psychology. But hidden behind these figures are sources of dis¬
sension that seek to split psychology, at least into two, if not
more, separate and independent disciplines. Many natural-science
oriented psychologists became disenchanted with the APA follow¬
ing World War II because of what they perceived as an over¬
concern with professional issues at the expense of scientific af¬
fairs and standards of scholarship. As a result a new organization
was formed in 1959, the Psychonomic Society, designed not to
compete with the APA for its membership but rather to sever ties
with most of the psychologists who belonged to APA. The aim of
the Psychonomic Society was to limit its membership to those
psychologists who demonstrated proven research skills of the sort
that was consistent with a natural-science approach. The Psycho¬
nomic Society deliberately avoided matters of professional inter-
302 Psychology: A Science in Conflict
has in seventy years of life” (p. 659).^ Fifty years later many dis¬
tinguished experimentalists would still bemoan the laek of im¬
pressive progress and perhaps even aflBrm William James’s ehar-
aeterization of psyehology as a ‘"nasty little subjeet.”^ Boring
offered two explanations for the lack of progress in psychology.
One was that psychology had no great men like Darwin, the
other that psychology was too involved in philosophy: “Psychol¬
ogy ought to fare better when it completely surrenders its philo¬
sophical heritage, in fact as well as in voiced principle, and pro¬
ceed, unimpeded by a divided soul, about its business” (1929,
p. 661).
Neither reason is compelling. The absence of a genius may
reflect the refractoriness of psychological problems to any broad-
range theoretical solutions. In other words, psychology does not
provide opportunities for gifted individuals to achieve genius sta¬
tus.^ Perhaps the overconcern with methodological issues ex¬
presses the unique problems of psychology that are not shared by
other disciplines. In addition, it can be argued that the method¬
ological discussions have not been too excessive but instead too
superflcial.
In contrast to Boring’s disappointments, Sigmund Koch’s
(1974) view of psychology is exhilaratingly depressed. He notes
that John Stuart Mill in 1843 suggested that the “backward state”
of the psychological sciences, which Mill labeled the “moral sci¬
ences,” could “only be remedied by applying to them the methods
of the physical sciences.” Koch believes Mill’s recommendations
have been implemented over the past 100 years and “the Millian
hypothesis has been fulsomely disconfirmed.”
Koch backs up his conclusions with a variety of arguments.
ing around a corner a rapidly running rat tends to hug the wall
to which he is brought close encouraging him to enter the alley,
correct or not, that the wall leads to). The eonsequence of all the
research on multiunit maze learning was that the large number of
specific factors obscured or distorted whatever basic principles
were operating. Multiunit learning was abandoned as a research
area for the psychology of learning.
The argument that a natural significance attaches to develop¬
mental and comparative research might be considered to be an¬
other form of the previous position in favor of a biopsychological
orientation. Biopsychology investigates the relationship between
behavior and neurophysiological events' and in essence the same
relationship is involved in the developmental and comparative
approaches. Although this may be potentially true it does not
necessarily follow that problems in developmental and compara¬
tive psychology must always be conceptualized within a bio¬
psychological framework. The Piagetian research program is a
striking example of a developmental approach that avoids getting
involved in specifying, or even speculating about, the neuro¬
physiological substrate of behavior. Only an acknowledgement is
made to the involvement of maturational factors in ontogenetic
changes in cognitive development. One can express reservations
about the Piagetian research program; yet one would be hard put
to deny the significance of both the obtained ontogenetic changes
in cognitive functioning and the general theoretical proposal that
the sequence of cognitive stages is invariant.
Similarly one can point to phylogenetic differences in learn¬
ing set data. Harlow (1949) extended traditional discrimination¬
learning procedures to a series of successive problems each with a
different pair of discriminanda. With monkeys as subjects he
noted an astonishing change in learning proficiency from slow,
gradual learning during the initial problems to the rapid, practi¬
cally one-trial learning after three hundred problems. The ability
to learn-how-to-learn (i.e., to establish learning sets) is influenced
by phylogenetic differences; primates are markedly superior to
carnivores who, in turn, exceed by far the performance of rodents
(Warren, 1965). Although, at present, no black-box theory of
Future Trends in Psychology ^25
Evaluation Research
the discipline can best serve the needs of society. In regard to the
first issue the thesis has been advanced that social psychology is
primarily a historical inquiry because basic social forces cannot
be replicated in the laboratory. As noted previously, a tendency
has prevailed in certain segments of psychology to treat experi¬
mental and empirical as synonymous. For a discipline to be scien¬
tific, the experimental method, according to some, must be the
dominant mode of inquiry. This position flies in the face of the
history of science; Darwin demonstrated the power of naturalistic
observations when combined with creative thought. One could
also cite the achievements of paleontology and geology, both of
which greatly depend on historical analysis.
A methodological prescription is not being offered to the ef¬
fect that the historical method is either the appropriate or the
best method for social psychology. Evolutionary theory, as well
as paleontology and historical geology, has been supplemented in
significant ways by experimental efforts. It would be foolish to
suggest that at all times one specific empirical method should be
the only or the most fruitful method for social psychology. But it
would not be foolish to consider the relative accomplishments of
historical and experimental social psychology while attempting to
estimate their future value, especially for the near term.
To be specific, consider for a moment, the potential contribu¬
tions of the analysis of civil strife by the political scientist, Gurr
(1970), with the efforts of laboratory research to verify cognitive
dissonance theory. By collecting and analyzing data from a large
number of sources of civil strife in 114 countries and formulating
summary measures of the strife (e.g., pervasiveness, intensity,
duration) as well as of the characteristics of the societies (e.g.,
economic development, type of political system, geocultural re¬
gion), Gurr proposes a theory of civil strife that emphasizes the
inffuence of relative deprivation:
Figure 8.1
Emergentism
A Logical Consideration
Summary
Psychotherapy
S71
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386 Index
.: ••
s^T.
I
i
Unique in analyzing the nature of psychology, this book does not
prescribe a “correct interpretation” but rather illuminates the dif¬
ferent kinds of psychology that currently exist. It offers an under¬
standing of contemporary psychology by revealing the assumptions
of different interpretations and the distinctive kinds of knowledge
they produce. Three basic, interrelated topics are analyzed succes¬
sively: the subject matter of psychology; the criteria for understand¬
ing psychological events; and the ethical principles underlying the
application of psychological knowledge. These topics confront psy¬
chologists with a methodological maze which can ultimately lead to
incompatible conceptions of psychology. The author explores the
various routes through this maze, and disentangles the numerous
methodological and empirical issues associated with choices. In
examining the structure of psychology—which in turn reveals the
diversity of methodological assumptions and ultimate goals—the
book inevitably raises questions concerning the future of psychology,
a topic which is discussed in the final chapter.
The Author
Howard H. Kendler is Professor of Psychology at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of Basic Psychology,
Third Edition, and co-editor of Essays in Neobehaviorism (with ]. T.
Spence).
Oxford Universit
0195029003
Jacket design by Joy Taylor 04/20/201 / 2:0/-3