In The Social Consequences of Modern Psychology Eysenck takes
the position that social science has real substance, and its
findings ought to be applicable to social problems of our times.
Although there is little that scientists can do about war and its
prevention, or about social unrest and upheaval, or about strikes
and other confrontations, there are a number of questions to which
we can give tentative answers. This book deals with some of these
questions, and finds some of the answers.
Eysenck begins with a look at a paradox of modern psychology.
Experimental psychologists use strictly scientific methods to
investigate what to many people seem trivial and sterile problems,
yet some social psychologists, psychiatrists and psychoanalysts
investigate what are clearly important and socially relevant
problems, but use methods and theories whose scientific rigor is
doubtful at best. This paradox is artificial and unnecessary.
Methods of investigation and theories and concepts enable us to
combine worthwhile problems and rigorous methods.
The book takes a long look at a particular problem which Eysenck
investigated in depth during his illustrious lifetime. This tour de
force, by one of the magisterial figures of modern psychology, is
written for people as well as about people. It is not a rehash of
the voluminous writings of lawyers, poets, politicians, dramatists,
historians, psychiatrists and others who have felt compelled to
write about these psychological matters without even a smattering
of psychological knowledge. It is, instead, based on empirical
investigations that are too often declared to be nonexistent by
publicists and politicos.
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