Psychology is at present one of the most fashionable scholarly disciplines. In 2018, the American Psychological Association announced that psychology is more popular than it has ever been. It is estimated that between 1.2 and 1.6 million undergraduates take introductory psychology classes each year. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, overall employment for psychologists will grow by 19% between 2014 and 2024, much faster than the 7% average growth predicted for all occupations. Even the Catholic Church took notice of the fieldâs growing popularity, quite some time ago. In his 1987 report on the state of the church, the future pope Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger expressed concerns that psychology posed a real threat to religion, that it was responsible for empty monasteries and had superseded theology (Ratzinger and Messori 1987, pp. 99â100).
Indeed, the popularity and spread of psychology is tremendous. Most illustrated magazines have advice columns edited by a psychologist to address concerns from readers. Many people have scheduled appointments with their psychologists or psychotherapists and spend a few hours every week in their offices. TV programs often feature experts (psychologists) explaining why somebody had killed, raped, defrauded money or committed suicide. Psychologists always show up after some major event to provide an interpretation of what happened. In most bookstores, shelves bend under the weight of volumes offering psychological support and advice. Celebrities usually discuss their psychological problems publicly and openly talk about therapeutic programs that they participated in. People socializing at gatherings exchange recommendations for psychotherapists. Psychologists often show up at crash sites or the epicenters of natural disasters. They work at schools, hospitals, hospices, social support sites and in the human resource departments of most corporations. They can be found in the police and in the army, but also in churches and prisons. Psychology truly is omnipresent.
At the same time, it is replete with controversies, flaws, uncertain claims and even myths. In recent years, the field of psychology has been rocked by numerous scandals, such as the participation of psychologists in developing methods for enhancing the interrogation of prisoners, the demasking of a tremendous scientific fraud, and multiple failures in the replication of famous experiments, primarily in social psychology. These stories have made their way onto the front pages of newspapers, and information about them has traveled well beyond the borders of the academic community. Psychology and its weaknesses are the subject of conversations everywhere, with opinions being given regardless of education and knowledge. Many authors are talking and writing about the crisis in psychology. It is not uncommon to encounter the radical opinion that psychology in general is not a science. These opinions crowd out the voices of the authorities and scientists who built its foundations. Many lay readers, students, but also psychology teachers feel lost in the flood of opinions. Despite the growing popularity of psychology, it appears to be evolving into a minefield. From time to time, one of the mines explodes, leading to a precipitous drop of societal trust in the discipline.
How strong are the foundations of our science? Are we in fact in the midst of a crisis of psychology, as the sensational headlines declare? What are our fieldâs possibilities for the future?
While many have presented their views on the subject, credible voices answering that question are more difficult to find in the newspapers and on social media. One way to reach them is to collect the most eminent representatives of our field in one place and have them engage in a serious debate. While this is a task perhaps beyond the capacities of one individual, it is not impossible. In my view, a credible substitute for such a debate is a book containing conversations with masters of psychology. While it does not allow for a direct exchange of thoughts among them, I nevertheless believe that the careful reader, based on the words of some of our professionâs most distinguished representatives, will be able to discern both the common ground they share on some issues and the distinct differences among them. In addition, compared to a traditional debate, a book has the virtue of a lifespan longer than that of other, more ephemeral forms, and after a number of years can serve as a sort of intellectual bridge linking history with the present.
In undertaking the effort of carrying out such an endeavor, I was faced with complex dilemmas. Who should be considered an âauthorityâ in our field? Should the selection of contributors be guided by rankings, and if so, which ones? How, taking into account the limitations of space inherent to a book, can the participation of practitioners of various subdisciplines be ensured? How to avoid the important voices that sometimes fail to break through the myriad of publications preferred by the academic system of Western civilization? That very same system that doubtlessly contributed to the fact that psychology is now said to be in crisis.
In attempting to resolve these dilemmas, I understood that I would not be able to compile a list of contributors that would please everybody. However, I did everything within my power to minimize potential biases, as well as to go beyond my personal preferences. I decided to use existing academic rankings so as to ensure the participation of the most outstanding scholars and thinkers in the process of painting a picture of contemporary psychology. To this end, I primarily employed two rankings published in the form of scientific articles (Haggbloom et al. 2002; Diener et al. 2014) and one from the internet (The Best Schools 2019). The authors of the former were also at pains to apply such criteria in their rankings that would ensure the particular place occupied by a given scientist would accurately reflect that individualâs contribution to psychology. The Internet ranking The 50 Most Influential Living Psychologists in the World was created based on the assumption that the influence of an individual can be evaluated by investigating the co-occurrence of the individual and the topic in web-accessible documents. In the creatorsâ opinion, if a person is influential with a particular topic then this person should be often mentioned in discussions of that topic. Their approach uses machine learning and search algorithms to characterize academic influence on the web, and thereby avoids the bias of continual human intervention that infects some academic rankings.
In preparing the list of contributors, I went to great lengths for the picture painted of contemporary psychology to also encompass its foundations located in history. The discoveries made by psychology that have withstood the test of time are responsible for its scientific strength, and a detailed review of them may assist us in understanding some contemporary weaknesses. This is why, when selecting my interlocutors, I placed significant stock in the 2002 ranking titled âThe 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century.â I invited the most influential living psychologists practicing in the last century as well. This led to the inclusion of such participants as Jerome Kagan, Noam Chomsky, Michael Posner, Elizabeth Loftus, Robert Sternberg, Robert Plomin and Daniel Kahneman. The past and continuing importance of their accomplishments in forming contemporary psychology is also confirmed by the high position they enjoy in newer rankings.
Some of my interlocutors were too young to be included in the rankings of psychologists working mainly in the twentieth century, but their contribution to the development of academic psychology is so huge that they took prominent positions among the previously mentioned scientists in the academic ranking published in 2014 (Diener et al. 2014). These include neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux and social psychologist Roy Baumeister.
Using the aforementioned academic rankings in the course of creating my list of interviewees, I was to a certain degree doomed to repeat the biases present in them. One bias in the rankings of eminence is that they rely on sources that give heavy weight to Americans, or at least to English speakers. Thus, the rankings, and consequently my list of contributors, do not fully cover the entire world and give too little credit to scientists outside the USA. This should be taken into account while reading this book. Another major concern is the infrequency of ethnic minorities in my list. Although general progress has been made in terms of human and civil rights for African Americans, Asians and Latino/Hispanics, these groups are extremely underrepresented in academic rankings.
The same applies to women. The very low percentage of women in academic rankings reflects the fact that they found it difficult to be accepted to graduate programs, were virtually excluded from having professorships in universities, and usually served as research associates or assistants. And while in recent years women have dominated such fields of study as psychology, and have made deep inroads into science, it is perhaps still too soon for these advances to be reflected in academic rankings which are almost the exclusive domain of people 50 years of age and up.
Bearing in mind the fact that contemporary psychology is more than just mainstream academic research in which social, cognitive and neuropsychologists dominate, my list of contributors includes those whose activity rarely assures them a prominent place in academic rankings (or has not yet done so), but without whom the picture of our science would be incomplete. These include Brian Nosek, a leading advocate of the open science movement, which is of exceptional importance in times when psychology is experiencing a replication crisis and ways of overcoming it are being sought. It is hard to imagine an honest presentation of the condition of contemporary psychology without the involvement of advocates of the open science movement.
My invitation for an interview was extended to Scott Lilienfeld not only because he is an outstanding clinical psychologist, but also due to the fact that he applies an evidence-based approach to this area and he is a representative of a rare approach to science that can be described as subtractive epistemology. The essence of this approach consists in cleansing both scholarship and practice of false constructs that find no confirmation in empirical evidence. Engaging in such thankless âcleanupâ work makes it harder to appear in academic rankings than creating a new theory, even if it later turns out to be false. Despite that, Lilienfeld is a well-known and respected scientist and skeptic, which is why I felt his perspective in the discussion on the condition of contemporary psychology may prove invaluable.
The image of mental health psychology is complemented by the words of Vikram Patelâan internationally recognized authority in the field of global mental health. His perspective is also of immense value, because it takes into account the problems of the greater part of the worldâs population, frequently quite different from what we focus on in our Western cultural milieu, particularly in North America. As a psychiatrist, he doesnât appear in psychologistsâ rankings, but his efforts have been recognized by his inclusion in the TIME 100 list of the most influential people in the world in 2015.
An even rarer sight in academic rankings are representatives of such fields as parapsychology. For years, Susan Backmore was a leading and credible scholar in the field. Having abandoned it, she can regard it critically and with distance. She is also the creator of the exceptionally interesting concept of memetics, in which she attempts to combine the biological, psychological and cultural perspectives. I felt that this synthetic and interdisciplinary kind of thinking, so rare in contemporary psychology, is also deserving of attention. Blackmore was awarded 24th place by Best Masters in Psychology in the list of â30 Most Influential Psychologists Working Todayâ (Tjentz 2013).
The voices of representatives of critical psychologyâthe harshest critics of mainstream psychologyâare also of exceptional importance in completing our contemporary picture of the discipline. They are not to be found in academic rankings that reflect the state of a science done in a manner they systematically criticize. It would be nothing short of imprudent to ignore their voices. In science, unlike in democracy, the majority does not decide. Carefully, listening to the minority is an essential element of critical scientific thought. Erica Burnam is doubtlessly an exceptional member of this minority, who looks at psychology not only from the perspective of critical psychology, but also a feminist one, thus representing two complementary positions that are in opposition to the fieldâs mainstream.
The list of luminary psychologists invited to speak in this book finishes with Carol Tavris who, not herself an academic psychologist, was placed on the The 50 Most Influential Living Psychologists in the World (The Best Schools 2019) for her profound impact on psychology. Tavris is a self-declared skeptic and feminist whose invaluable insights as a freelancer has enriched the diversity of thought in our field.
Looking at the table of contents, it should be borne in mind that its final shape is a product not only of the intentions of its author. Some of the psychologists I invited refused for various reasons to participate in my project, while others simply did not respond. I was also limited by the size of the book. At a certain point, I was forced to close the list of interlocutors, and I am painfully aware of the gaps in it. It lacks the voice of the presently strong evolutionary psychology, representatives of religious psychology and supporters of qualitative research. There are also no representatives of computational psychology, so important in the era of research on artificial intelligence and many other specialties. In closing my work on this book, I felt unsatisfied not only because of the lack of representatives of some fields, but also because of the absence of advocates of different conceptual frameworks for the science of psychology such as descriptive or phenomenological psychology.
Excusing myself by the size of the book and the fact that some representatives of the fields absent here did not respond to my invitations, I also take full responsibility for any inaccuracies in the image of modern psychology that these deficiencies may lead to. If the book is positively re...