I mentioned this article at (physical) Friam.  It's about the place of
behaviorism in modern psychology.  It's somewhat long so don't read it
unless you're interested in that topic:

http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/pub/behaviorism-at-100/1

Frank

Frank Wimberly
Phone (505) 670-9918

On Aug 13, 2016 10:54 AM, "Barry MacKichan" <[email protected]>
wrote:

> And that the scanning equipment worked at least once.
>
> --Barry
>
> On 12 Aug 2016, at 22:29, Russ Abbott wrote:
>
> Demonstrating that there was at least one time when psychologists thought
> that illustrations and anecdotes had probative value.
>
> On Fri, Aug 12, 2016 at 9:22 PM Nick Thompson [email protected]
> wrote:
>
> Hi, Roger,
>
> Thanks for this.
>
> Back in the good old days, when I was employed, I interacted a lot with
> qualitative psychologists and we argued about the probative value of
> illustrations and anecdotes. Their strong points were that illustrations
> allowed one to say that at least that happened once and that anecdotes, or
> stories about individual events of the life of single persons, at least
> allowed one to see the whole of something, even if for a brief second.
> Experiments, however, with statistics dissect causes in way that is
> entirely foreign to reality.
>
> So what is the probative value of a picture of a brain scan?
>
> Nick
>
> Nicholas S. Thompson
>
> Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
>
> Clark University
>
> http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
>
> *From:* Friam [mailto:[email protected]]
>
> *On Behalf Of *Roger Critchlow *Sent:* Friday, August 12, 2016 9:05 PM
> *To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <
> [email protected]>
> *Subject:* [FRIAM] credibility by association
>
> From Science 12 Aug 2016::
>
> A decade ago, it seemed as though every other neuroscience paper in
> high-profile journals featured multiple multicolored images of brain scans.
> In some cases, readers—many of whom were psychologists who had written
> papers on the same topic—pointed out that the pictographic scans added
> little explanatory power. Hopkins *et al.* have extended an earlier study
> of the relative impact of psychology and neuroscience to encompass both
> more reductive disciplines, such as physics, chemistry, and biology, and
> less reductive disciplines, such as social science. They find that study
> subjects judge scientific explanations to be of higher quality when they
> contain information from the neighboring more reductive field, even when
> that information is irrelevant.
> *Cognition* *155*, 67 (2016).
> -- rec --
>
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