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    | | |  | What's Behind the Research? : Discovering Hidden Assumptions in the Behavioral Sciences |  | List Price: $39.95 Your Price: $39.95
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| Product Info | Reviews |  | 
 << 1 >>  Rating:
  Summary: A Landmark in the Behavioral Sciences
 Review:    The book is easy to read, for a student in the behavioral sciences.  Although written for undergraduates the book presents important concepts useful to anyone involved in scientific research . In reviewing the history of research techniques used in the behavioral sciences the book makes a vivid distinction between assumptions and fact.  Counter-intuitive ideas are presented in a clear and concise manner that will help the reader to be a better critical thinker and conduct more accurate research.  Read early on in your undergraduate education for it will cultivate your mind.
 
 Rating:
  Summary: A Consumers Guide to the Behavioral Sciences
 Review: This book is about the philosophy of the behavioral sciences. However, as the title indicates it is written as a sort of "Consumer guide". There are presentations and discussions of psychodynamic theory, behaviorist theory, humanist theory, cognitive theory, eclecticism, structuralism and postmodernism. There are also chapters on epistemology, determinism, reductionism and the nature of science. Taken as a consumer guide, I found the book useful. Especially, I found the discussion about eclecticism (and its hidden assumptions)and about the problems of being too applied useful. The book is not only relevant for psychology, but for many areas in the social sciences. I have used some of the arguments in this book about library and information studies (se my article "Library and information science: practice, theory, and philosophical basis" in the journal Information Processing and Management, vol. 36(3), 2000, pp. 501-531).
 
 Rating:
  Summary: A Consumers Guide to the Behavioral Sciences
 Review: This book is about the philosophy of the behavioral sciences. However, as the title indicates it is written as a sort of "Consumer guide". There are presentations and discussions of psychodynamic theory,  behaviorist theory, humanist theory, cognitive theory, eclecticism,  structuralism and postmodernism. There are also chapters on epistemology,  determinism, reductionism and the nature of science.  Taken as a consumer  guide, I found the book useful. Especially, I found the discussion about  eclecticism (and its hidden assumptions)and about the problems of being too  applied useful.  The book is not only relevant for psychology, but for many  areas in the social sciences. I have used some of the arguments in this  book about library and information studies (se my article "Library and  information science: practice, theory, and philosophical basis" in the  journal Information Processing and Management, vol. 36(3), 2000, pp.  501-531).
 
 
 
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