Two kinds of theory- what psychology can learn from Einstein (Pre-published)
Citation
McGann, M. & Speelman, C, P. (2020) 'Two kinds of theory- what psychology can learn from Einstein', Theory and Psychology, 30(5), 674-689.
Date
2020-04-24Author
McGann, Marek
Speelman, Craig P.
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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McGann, M. & Speelman, C, P. (2020) 'Two kinds of theory- what psychology can learn from Einstein', Theory and Psychology, 30(5), 674-689.
Abstract
A century ago, Einstein distinguished between two kinds of theory—theories of principle and constructive theories. These have separate but complementary roles to play in the advancement of knowledge, in the manner in which they relate to data and in how they are developed. The different kinds of theory carry implications for what kinds of data we produce and for how they are put to use. We outline Einstein’s distinction and the model of theory formation that it involves. We then use the distinction to look at some of the discussion of scientific practice in psychology, particularly recent work on the need for more theoretical, rather than purely methodological, sophistication. We argue in agreement with Einstein that the distinction is a useful one and that adopting it as a tenet of theoretical development requires a renewed commitment to a natural history of psychology.
Keywords
Scientific practiceTheories of principle
Constructive theories
Natural history
Exploratory research