Nick,
This is bizarre! "Fiction is a potential method in scientific psychology." I
cannot, for the life of me parse it. Is it equivalent to saying: "Fiction is a
potential method in scientific physics."? Granted that science fiction has
broadly anticipated many things 
that are now part of scientific physics, but it also anticipated many things
that were not, and I hope you are not arguing that cutting edge sci-fi writers
should get endowed chairs in physics on the basis of their scientific
accomplishments!

When I recall you making criticisms along these lines, it was mostly to
frustrate doe-eyed grad students who wanted to save the world. You argued, at
those times, that if they wanted to help survivors of genocide, they would be
better off writing a gripping novel that helped increase international
attention to their plight; if they wanted to help survivors get along better
with genocide bystanders, you would write a heart wrenching novel with a
message of reconciliation; etc. The last thing you should think in either of
these situations, you argued, is that everything is failing for the lack of one
more scientific study in social/personality psychology. This arguement I
completely agreed with. It does seem to argue for some sort of deep
relationship between fictional literature and "truth." 

However, I have no idea what you are getting at now. Certainly one could study
fiction as an empirical psychologist, but that wouldn't make fiction a
"method". Are you trying to say that a valid way to do scientific psychology is
to make stuff up? No chance you are doing that. What are you trying to get at?!?

Eric



On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 12:42 AM, "Nicholas  Thompson"
<[email protected]> wrote:
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>I would like, if only as a matter of principle, to rise to the defense of all
those techno-barbarians on the list who cannot find voice to defend themselves,
but I can only say that …
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>IF there is something valuable in fiction, if it indeed fosters or transmits
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>Then fiction is a potential method in scientific psychology. 
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>To  twist Stephen J. Gould’s words a bit:  They are Overlapping Magisteria. 
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>There is no knowledge that is not potentially scientific knowledge.  
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>Nick 
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