Cards (13)

    • Can explain key aspects of social behaviour?

      • Some social behaviours that only emerge within a group context and can't be understood at the level of individual group members
      • E.G. the effects of de-individuation of prisoners and guards in the Stanford couldn't be understood by studying the Ps as individuals - the interactions between the people that mattered
      • Holistic explanations are needed for a more complete understanding of behaviour than reductionist approaches
    • Impractical?

      • Tend to not lend themselves to rigorous scientific and become vague and speculative as they become more complex
      • E.G. if we accept there are many factors contributing to depression it's difficult to establish which is most influential and which to use as a basis of therapy
      • Suggests that when it comes to finding solutions for real world problems lower level explanation may be more applicable
    • Against:
      Too hypothetical
    • Against:
      What does the lack of experimentation lead to?

      A lack of reliability
    • Against:
      Can't be empirically tested
    • Against:
      What is a major issue?

      It's too detailed, to complex which leads things unanswered
    • Against:
      Why does it lack predictive power?

      The explanations are broad, imprecise and untested
    • For:
      What does it acknowledge?
      Complexity
    • For:
      What does it not artificially strive for?
      Simplistic explanations
    • For:
      Which interactionist accounts are sometimes more valid than reductionist ones?
      • Human reproductive behaviours - partner choice
      • Social psychology - conformity, obedience
      • Breland and Breland - instinctive drift
    • For:
      What is it less likely to leave out?
      Cultural and social factors
    • For:
      What does it focus on?
      Subjective experiences
    • For:
      What is it better at explaining?
      The 'why' of behaviours
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