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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John Staddon (Duke University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9781138295353ISBN 10: 1138295353 Pages: 158 Publication Date: 06 December 2017 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Replaced By: 9781032683898 Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsJohn Staddon's aim in this highly readable book is to provide a guide through the `blizzard of scientific and pseudo-scientific information that rains on the public every day.' He starts by taking a critical look at sciences such as biology and physics and then provides a fascinating and thought-provoking critique of the social sciences, particularly psychology and economics, where he argues that fashionable ideas are often based on untested and untestable theories. Staddon jolts us out of complacent acceptance of how the media often present science. - Marian Stamp Dawkins, University of Oxford, UK In a digital world where many struggle to tell fake news from scientific facts, Scientific Method provides an easy-to-read primer for scientific thinking. The book lives from John Staddon's masterly use of examples that clarify problematic methods plaguing the social sciences, such as the proliferation of mathematical formulas without well-defined or measurable terms, near-unfalsifiable theories that are defended with confidence, and the ritualistic testing of null hypotheses. Science affects our lives, and this short, clear, and enjoyable book will affect how its readers think about science. - Gerd Gigerenzer, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Germany John Staddon does not take prisoners. In this new book he displays his erudition and sharp critical intelligence to discuss what he sees as the main weaknesses of social sciences today, and especially of mainstream economics. If you are a social scientist, and especially an economist, pray your work has not been chosen as an example. If you are not, the book will provide you with an illuminating survey of real and potential pitfalls of current work in social sciences. - Alex Kacelnik, University of Oxford, UK Staddon demonstrates scientific method in action, applying his analytic/critical skill to dozens of applications in epidemiology/biomedicine, animal behavior, social psychology, and the ever-dismal science of economics. He shows that both correlational data and `gold-standard' multi-group designs may suggest hypotheses, but not explanations, which require the discovery of causes across time. - John C. Malone, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA John Staddon's aim in this highly readable book is to provide a guide through the 'blizzard of scientific and pseudo-scientific information that rains on the public every day.' He starts by taking a critical look at sciences such as biology and physics and then provides a fascinating and thought-provoking critique of the social sciences, particularly psychology and economics, where he argues that fashionable ideas are often based on untested and untestable theories. Staddon jolts us out of complacent acceptance of how the media often present science. - Marian Stamp Dawkins, University of Oxford, UK In a digital world where many struggle to tell fake news from scientific facts, Scientific Method provides an easy-to-read primer for scientific thinking. The book lives from John Staddon's masterly use of examples that clarify problematic methods plaguing the social sciences, such as the proliferation of mathematical formulas without well-defined or measurable terms, near-unfalsifiable theories that are defended with confidence, and the ritualistic testing of null hypotheses. Science affects our lives, and this short, clear, and enjoyable book will affect how its readers think about science. - Gerd Gigerenzer, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Germany John Staddon does not take prisoners. In this new book he displays his erudition and sharp critical intelligence to discuss what he sees as the main weaknesses of social sciences today, and especially of mainstream economics. If you are a social scientist, and especially an economist, pray your work has not been chosen as an example. If you are not, the book will provide you with an illuminating survey of real and potential pitfalls of current work in social sciences. - Alex Kacelnik, University of Oxford, UK Staddon demonstrates scientific method in action, applying his analytic/critical skill to dozens of applications in epidemiology/biomedicine, animal behavior, social psychology, and the ever-dismal science of economics. He shows that both correlational data and 'gold-standard' multi-group designs may suggest hypotheses, but not explanations, which require the discovery of causes across time. - John C. Malone, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA John Staddon's aim in this highly readable book is to provide a guide through the `blizzard of scientific and pseudo-scientific information that rains on the public every day.' He starts by taking a critical look at sciences such as biology and physics and then provides a fascinating and thought-provoking critique of the social sciences, particularly psychology and economics, where he argues that fashionable ideas are often based on untested and untestable theories. Staddon jolts us out of complacent acceptance of how the media often present science. - Marian Stamp Dawkins, University of Oxford, UK In a digital world where many struggle to tell fake news from scientific facts, Scientific Method provides an easy-to-read primer for scientific thinking. The book lives from John Staddon's masterly use of examples that clarify problematic methods plaguing the social sciences, such as the proliferation of mathematical formulas without well-defined or measurable terms, near-unfalsifiable theories that are defended with confidence, and the ritualistic testing of null hypotheses. Science affects our lives, and this short, clear, and enjoyable book will affect how its readers think about science. - Gerd Gigerenzer, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Germany John Staddon does not take prisoners. In this new book he displays his erudition and sharp critical intelligence to discuss what he sees as the main weaknesses of social sciences today, and especially of mainstream economics. If you are a social scientist, and especially an economist, pray your work has not been chosen as an example. If you are not, the book will provide you with and illuminating survey of real and potential pitfalls of current work in social sciences. - Alex Kacelnik, University of Oxford, UK Staddon demonstrates scientific method in action, applying his analytic/critical skill to dozens of applications in epidemiology/biomedicine, animal behavior, social psychology, and the ever-dismal science of economics. He shows that both correlational data and `gold-standard' multi-group designs may suggest hypotheses, but not explanations, which require the discovery of causes across time. - John C. Malone, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA Author InformationJohn Staddon is James B. Duke Professor of Psychology, and Professor of Biology and Neurobiology, Emeritus at Duke University. He does research on adaptive behavior, economics, and the history and philosophy of science. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |