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***Before you read below, please, please, PLEASE keep discussion civil. Don't start arguing about personal beliefs of who is right or wrong. I want this thread to be about sharing ideas, and an enjoyable place for discussion (as all threads should be). Thank you.***
This is a quote from a friend of a friend on facebook in response to this article:
From a physics forum:
And even more (same forum thread):
There's a lot of info to think about, and could branch into many sub-categories. But for the sake of this thread, I am interested in what your thoughts of psychology as a science/pseudoscience are.
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Thoughts I've had on this subject:
I know quite a few of us here are spiritual, myself included, but the concept of our collective unconsciousness as survival hard-wiring makes sense. But what created the hardwiring? It is difficult to explain the mind beyond the material. If all we are are a series of chemical firings adapted to keep our biology alive, do we not have free will? All our likes are because our body responded positively to a stimuli, and our dislikes a response to pain? What about introversion? You could say it is caused by negative experiences with people, but what about someone who has always had positive experience, but just becomes tired from the interaction? How does it work? Can there be a material explanation to everything? And if not, should the non-material be written off as pseudo?
This is a quote from a friend of a friend on facebook in response to this article:
I would say basically all psychology is pseudoscience. Neuroscience is actually a thing, however.
From a physics forum:
If you're talking about "classical" psychology/psychiatry after Freud/Jung/Adler, yup, pseudo-science all right. If that. Freud, of course, had his weird obsessions with Oedipus and penis envy, but you should read some of the crap Jung came up with - synchronicity, archetypes, the collective unconscious. Mysticism, not science.
Modern psychiatry, with an emphasis on pharmacy (drug treatment) and evidence based interventions (electroconvulsive therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy), etc. - pretty scientific. A neurophysiologic basis is sought whenever possible and treatments are evaluated with randomised controlled trials.
Some modern practices are still pseudoscientific - the Rorscharch test, hypnotic "regression" therapy, etc. - but self-respecting psychiatrists don't generally pander to this crap.
And even more (same forum thread):
the common misconception of Jung's Collective Unconscious is probably more like mysticism- but the actual idea is more properly understood by the very real science of evolutionary biology- the Collective Unconscious [as well as synchonicity/ archetypes/ subtle correspondences] is merely mystical sounding description for a very physical idea: that many of a human's foundational conscious structures are NOT learned structures built uniquely for each individual during child development as was generally accepted during Jung's time- instead his colorful conjecture essentially shows that our most primitive fears and ways of thinking about basic survival are hard-wired adaptations that our species cultivated in it's genome over it's evolutionary history- so that each human would essentially have the same copy of these unconscious ways of thinking hard-wired into them at birth- the other part of Jung's idea is that this kludged black-box of hard-wired neural processes that we all share is responsible in part for the nature of human myths and metaphysics- this is because the 'collective unconscious black-box' has priority flight-or-fight brut survivability programs: be scared of the dark- be scared of snakes- embrace the light of the sun- look for pure water/food/resources- stay away from violent humans- trust calm humans- etc- all of these millions of little algorithms that are hard-wired for each of us and tell us how to react to very basic survival scenarios provided the basis for morality and ethics as well as all the creative mythical symbologies primitive humans developed to organize and implement these core concepts-
so there is nothing mystical about the collective unconscious in these terms- it is the folk interpretation that instead of each human possessing his own 'black-box' of adapted wiring that our 'souls' are connected in some kind of spiritual hyperspace in which the myths are real- and that we sometimes tap into it-
There's a lot of info to think about, and could branch into many sub-categories. But for the sake of this thread, I am interested in what your thoughts of psychology as a science/pseudoscience are.
---
Thoughts I've had on this subject:
I know quite a few of us here are spiritual, myself included, but the concept of our collective unconsciousness as survival hard-wiring makes sense. But what created the hardwiring? It is difficult to explain the mind beyond the material. If all we are are a series of chemical firings adapted to keep our biology alive, do we not have free will? All our likes are because our body responded positively to a stimuli, and our dislikes a response to pain? What about introversion? You could say it is caused by negative experiences with people, but what about someone who has always had positive experience, but just becomes tired from the interaction? How does it work? Can there be a material explanation to everything? And if not, should the non-material be written off as pseudo?
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