| Francis Heylighen, Eric Rosseel, Frank Demeyere - 1990 - 452 halaman
...We consider it as similar in its denotation as the term 'confusion of domains' (cf. Goudsmit, 1988). "The great snare of the psychologist is the confusion...the mental fact about which he is making his report. I shall hereafter call this the 'psychologist's fallacy' par excellence." (James, 1890, p. 1-196) As... | |
| John Shotter - 1993 - 212 halaman
...supposed final product. William James (l890: l96) describes this tendency as 'the psychologist's fallacy': The great snare of the psychologist is the confusion...mental fact about which he is making his report... Both it itself and its object are objects for him. Now when it is a cognitive state..., he ordinarily... | |
| Arnold H. Modell - 1993 - 278 halaman
...an example of what James called the "psychologist's fallacy" — the confusion of the psychologist's own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is making his report.54 James warned that the psychologist who reports on a presumed percept of the subject, such... | |
| P. Naur - 1995 - 388 halaman
...both treat 'ideas' as separate entities that come and go. ... [I 196] 'The Psychologist's Fallacy.' The great snare of the psychologist is the confusion...mental fact about which he is making his report.... [I 196-199] Chapter VIII THE RELATION OF MINDS TO OTHER THINGS ... [I 199-216] THE RELATION OF MINDS... | |
| Floyd Merrell - 1995 - 398 halaman
...fallacy" in this regard: that "inveterate habit" which the psychologist or theorist has of confusing "his own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is making his report" tJames 1950. 1:278). ln order to come to grips with experience. there is no choice hut to fabricate... | |
| Kurt Danziger - 1997 - 228 halaman
...update what William James famously referred to as 'The Psychologist's Fallacy'. He defined this as 'the confusion of his own standpoint with that of...the mental fact about which he is making his report' (James, 1890,1: 196). In the twentieth century one would want to substitute the more noncommittal 'psychological'... | |
| Richard M. Gale - 1999 - 388 halaman
...unwarranted, being an instance of his own "Psychologist Fallacy," in which the psychologist confuses "his own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is making his report" (195). Herein it takes the form of an unwarranted assumption that the features of the publicly observable... | |
| John R. Shook - 2000 - 332 halaman
...unfortunate prevalence of what he called the "psychologist's fallacy," in which the psychologist confuses "his own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is making his report."44 Dewey adopted the term "psychologist's fallacy" soon after. This adoption has caused many... | |
| Steven Meyer - 2001 - 486 halaman
...173, emphasis added). The unconscious was the last refuge of the "great snare of the psychologist": "the confusion of his own standpoint with that of the mental fact," often by uncritically assuming "that the mental state studied must be conscious of itself as the psychologist... | |
| John Howie - 2002 - 296 halaman
...them?"8 The flaw here is, in part at least, what William James termed the "psychologist's fallacy": The "great snare of the psychologist is the confusion...mental fact about which he is making his report." 4 Just that confusion is evident in Churchland's main argument, as it is in Jonsen's, for both adopt... | |
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