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[my thoughts] Benefits of outsider critical analysis

Messages
13,774
Not sure which forum to put this in to. I was just reading this from a Professor of mathematics, and it made me think of psychosocial approaches to medicine, and the lack of concern about them there is from those within the field. I'm sure things like this have been discussed before, but it was interesting to have it promoted so positively here:

A large part of becoming an X-er is joining a community of other X-ers. This often involves joining up with other X-ers, but it does not need to. It’s more an attitude of mind than anything else, though most of us find that it’s a lot easier when we team up with others. The centuries-old method of learning a craft or trade by a process of apprenticeship was based on this idea. [The video games scholar James Paul Gee, in his book What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy, p. 18] uses the term semiotic domain to refer to the culture and way of thinking that goes with a particular practice – a term that reflects the important role that language or symbols plays in these “communities of practice,” to use another popular term from the social science literature. […]

In Gee’s terms, learning to X competently means becoming part of the semiotic domain associated with X. Moreover, if you don’t become part of that semiotic domain you won’t achieve competency in X. Notice that I’m not talking here about becoming an expert, and neither is Gee. In some domains, it may be that few people are born with the natural talent to become world class. Rather, the point we are both making is that a crucial part of becoming competent at some activity is to enter the semiotic domain of that activity. This is why we have schools and universities, and this is why distance education will never replace spending a period of months or years in a social community of experts and other learners. Schools and universities are environments in which people can learn to become X-ers for various X activities – and a large part of that is learning to think and act like an X-er and to see yourself as an X-er. They are only secondarily places where you can learn the facts of X-ing; the part you can also acquire online or learn from a book. […]

The social aspect of learning that goes with entering a semiotic domain is often overlooked when educational issues are discussed, particularly when dis cussed by policy makers rather than professional teachers. Yet it is a huge factor. […]

Pretty much the only academics who have looked closely at a lot of psychosocial work are those who want to make a career out of psychosocial approaches to medicine. They will tend to know other workers in the field personally, and build social bonds with them. They will tend to feel similar to them, and trust them as part of a shared community. None of this is good for an honest pursuit of truth imo.

Years ago I was discussing Freud with an academic, and they were saying that they thought Freudian approaches will never be picked apart internally, as those with the deepest understanding of Freud's theories and approaches will be those with the deepest interests in maintaining respect for his work. Instead, future generations will simply become less interested in learning about his work, so it will fade away. I wasn't impressed, and felt that anyone making money from Freudian approaches also had a responsibility to try to pick them apart and make sure that they were reasonable - which was probably highly dysfunctional of me.
 

user9876

Senior Member
Messages
4,556
Not sure which forum to put this in to. I was just reading this from a Professor of mathematics, and it made me think of psychosocial approaches to medicine, and the lack of concern about them there is from those within the field. I'm sure things like this have been discussed before, but it was interesting to have it promoted so positively here:



Pretty much the only academics who have looked closely at a lot of psychosocial work are those who want to make a career out of psychosocial approaches to medicine. They will tend to know other workers in the field personally, and build social bonds with them. They will tend to feel similar to them, and trust them as part of a shared community. None of this is good for an honest pursuit of truth imo.
.

That can be a very big problem for research and academics often work in very closed worlds. I've known different groups of mathematicians who won't talk to each other because they back different approaches to a problem.

One of the nice things about this forum is that people come from a wide range of different backgrounds and hence pull in different points and experiences when looking at papers.

I suspect the psychosocial approach is a bit of an academic back water hence the very poor standard of research. The quality of their methodology and the logic behind their arguments as well as the way they look at results is all very poor. What has surprised me is some of the statisticians that work with them don't seem to glance a critical eye over the work. I think logicians I know would be shocked at some of wesselys articles.

From my own background I'm an IT researcher and have always had the most fun when pulling together people from different subjects. It can be challenging when working with people from different subjects but it also leads to creativity. So I've ended up working with mathematicians, psychologists, economists, criminologists, geophysicisits and lawyers. From what I see of some of the research councils in the UK they are keen on multidisciplinary research - but I've not had anything to do with the MRC. One of the attempts to bring together different subjects was in doctral research centers where PhD students were recruited from a wide range of subjects and then spend the first year doing courses in different areas. I think their is a crime centre in UCL (London) and a complex systems centre in Bristol.

One of the real problems with a small static research community is that they train their own people. That is those doing PhDs do them within the research community. This means they are never exposed to techniques from the wider world and just internalise the techniques rather than look at them critically. This can be particularly bad in back water areas which don't attract the brightest most inquisative people.
 

alex3619

Senior Member
Messages
13,810
Location
Logan, Queensland, Australia
This ties in with some things I have said about academic criticism. Functional somatic syndromes are a very small area, and most outside that field do not want to engage in serious debate, nor do they have the time or incentive. So there is very little criticism. So it does not get any course corrections. If its heading off the deep end its very hard to see that from inside the discipline.

They also practice verificationism to the exclusion of critical rationalism. This means their main method of advancing evidence is to gather supporting evidence, and dissenting evidence is ignored or downplayed. So they can get caught in a trap of only hearing apparently confirming evidence from their peers. They do not get to deal with the full range of disconfirming evidence.

It also fits with a growing opinion I have that most of them really believe what they are saying. From an outside perspective its hard to recognize that, but the bias from within their field is so strong they cannot see the problem. Since the problem can't be them (cognitive dissonance), it follows it must be someone else. That is why the advocate community sometimes get scapegoated.

This is not to claim that everyone is a believer. It just means its very hard to separate believers from agents of special interests who do not believe. Of course the best people a special interest can recruit are those who fully believe in their cause anyway.

Bye, Alex
 
Messages
13,774
Yeah, it reminded me of a few things I'd seen people here write. I thought it was interesting to have it presented in such a positive way - I guess that mathematics is an area were objectivity and proof is often easier to find, so the problems of this approach are less likely to occur.
 

user9876

Senior Member
Messages
4,556
N
Pretty much the only academics who have looked closely at a lot of psychosocial work are those who want to make a career out of psychosocial approaches to medicine. They will tend to know other workers in the field personally, and build social bonds with them. They will tend to feel similar to them, and trust them as part of a shared community. None of this is good for an honest pursuit of truth imo.

I think this is ofteh described as groupthink

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groupthink

Where a group of people self reinforce each other.

I quite liked this blog posting on the subject

http://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2008/05/whats_wrong_with_research_in_p.html
 

alex3619

Senior Member
Messages
13,810
Location
Logan, Queensland, Australia
Hi user9876, groupthink can be a real issue for any group. We are in danger of it too on PR, or any other community driven media. Like minds join and reinforce each other. Our primary defence against this is twofold: first, we all come from highly diverse backgrounds before getting sick. Second, PR has a very broad range of opinions. Thats important. A forum where all believe the same thing may not be sufficienty self critical to avoid groupthink.

Compare that to CBT/GET proponents. Most have a huge psych background - a narrow viewpoint. What is the range of educational institutions they come from? Has anyone even looked to see if they have degrees from a very small number of institutions? Most are from the UK. Its a very in-group to start with.

Bye, Alex

PS Nice article and commentaries you linked to, user9876.