Mayrhofer Roland, Kuhbandner Christof, Lindner Corinna
Department of Psychology, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2021 Jan 12;11:612805. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.612805. eCollection 2020.
The aim of psychology is to understand the human mind and behavior. In contemporary psychology, the method of choice to accomplish this incredibly complex endeavor is the experiment. This dominance has shaped the whole discipline from the self-concept as an empirical science and its very epistemological and theoretical foundations, via research practice and the scientific discourse to teaching. Experimental psychology is grounded in the scientific method and positivism, and these principles, which are characteristic for modern thinking, are still upheld. Despite this apparently stalwart adherence to modern principles, experimental psychology exhibits a number of aspects which can best be described as facets of postmodern thinking although they are hardly acknowledged as such. Many psychologists take pride in being "real natural scientists" because they conduct experiments, but it is particularly difficult for psychologists to evade certain elements of postmodern thinking in view of the specific nature of their subject matter. Postmodernism as a philosophy emerged in the 20th century as a response to the perceived inadequacy of the modern approach and as a means to understand the complexities, ambiguities, and contradictions of the times. Therefore, postmodernism offers both valuable insights into the very nature of experimental psychology and fruitful ideas on improving experimental practice to better reflect the complexities and ambiguities of human mind and behavior. Analyzing experimental psychology along postmodern lines begins by discussing the implications of transferring the scientific method from fields with rather narrowly defined phenomena-the natural sciences-to a much broader and more heterogeneous class of complex phenomena, namely the human mind and behavior. This ostensibly modern experimental approach is, however, riddled with postmodern elements: (re-)creating phenomena in an experimental setting, including the hermeneutic processes of generating hypotheses and interpreting results, is no carbon copy of "reality" but rather an active construction which reflects irrevocably the pre-existing ideas of the investigator. These aspects, analyzed by using postmodern concepts like hyperreality and simulacra, did not seep in gradually but have been present since the very inception of experimental psychology, and they are necessarily inherent in its philosophy of science. We illustrate this theoretical analysis with the help of two examples, namely experiments on free will and visual working memory. The postmodern perspective reveals some pitfalls in the practice of experimental psychology. Furthermore, we suggest that accepting the inherently fuzzy nature of theoretical constructs in psychology and thinking more along postmodern lines would actually clarify many theoretical problems in experimental psychology.
心理学的目标是理解人类的思维和行为。在当代心理学中,完成这项极其复杂任务的首选方法是实验。这种主导地位从作为一门实证科学的自我概念及其认识论和理论基础,到研究实践、科学论述乃至教学,塑造了整个学科。实验心理学以科学方法和实证主义为基础,而这些现代思维的特征性原则至今仍被秉持。尽管表面上坚定地遵循现代原则,但实验心理学展现出一些方面,这些方面最好被描述为后现代思维的特征,尽管它们几乎未被如此认可。许多心理学家为自己是“真正的自然科学家”而自豪,因为他们进行实验,但鉴于心理学研究对象的特殊性,心理学家很难回避后现代思维的某些元素。后现代主义作为一种哲学在20世纪出现,是对现代方法被认为存在的不足的回应,也是理解时代复杂性、模糊性和矛盾性的一种方式。因此,后现代主义既为实验心理学的本质提供了有价值的见解,也为改进实验实践以更好地反映人类思维和行为的复杂性与模糊性提供了富有成效的想法。沿着后现代路线分析实验心理学,首先要讨论将科学方法从现象定义相对狭窄的领域——自然科学——应用到更广泛、更多样化的复杂现象类别,即人类思维和行为时所产生的影响。然而,这种表面上现代的实验方法充满了后现代元素:在实验环境中(重新)创造现象,包括生成假设和解释结果的诠释过程,并非对“现实”的简单复制,而是一种积极的构建,不可避免地反映了研究者先前存在的观念。运用超现实和拟像等后现代概念分析这些方面,它们并非逐渐渗透进来,而是从实验心理学诞生之初就已存在,并且必然蕴含在其科学哲学之中。我们借助两个例子来说明这一理论分析,即关于自由意志和视觉工作记忆的实验。后现代视角揭示了实验心理学实践中的一些陷阱。此外,我们认为接受心理学理论构建中固有的模糊性并更多地以后现代思维方式思考,实际上会澄清实验心理学中的许多理论问题。