yagecero
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2011
- Messages
- 312
Freud is not representative of the modern of Psychological field. Heck, psychoanalysis (dream interpretation and whatnot) in general has fallen by the way-side.
My experience with academic Psychology dealt mostly with large amounts of anonymous questionnaire responses and observational data. Unless the the focus of the study required that the responses be vocalized, there was very little interaction between subject and researcher. Obviously, it's much easier to be honest and objective with nobody to judge you.
From these hundreds, sometimes thousands, of data points we'd run some basic statistical analysis and identify any trends or lack thereof, then revise our hypothesis and start again. That's really all psychological research is - obtaining numbers and running analyses. The thousands of psychological institutions across the globe are adding significant quantities of information into the current knowledge pool, which allows for some pretty significant meta research to take place. The claim that Psychology is not an "empirical" field is patently false.
So what you're saying is the data are dependant on the perceptions of those carrying out the research. Yes, I see. There is no way at all that those data could be manipulated through the researcher's interpretation. 8)
Ever heard of the observational paradox?
And I was by no means suggesting that Freud was representative of the current psychological field. Freud was an arbitrary time marker in my response to Psyduck's post.