Clicky

APA ONLINE HOME SITE MAP CONTACT PUBLICATIONS HOME APA BOOKS CHILDREN'S BOOKS DATABASES JOURNALS SOFTWARE VIDEOS
APA BOOKS
top of search box
spacer spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer  spacer
spacer APA BOOKS
spacer New Releases
spacer Coming Soon
spacer Bestsellers
spacer By Author
spacer By Subject
spacer By Title
spacer APA Style Products
spacer LifeTools: Books for the General Public
spacer Course Adoptions & Textbooks
spacer Continuing Education Books
spacer Information for Authors
spacer Ordering Information
spacer Returns Policy
spacer Copyright and Permissions
spacer View the 2009 Books Catalog (PDF: 3.64MB)
spacer
Contact APA Books
SPACER TOP NAVIGATION BAR

Critical Thinking About Psychology: Hidden Assumptions and Plausible Alternatives
Edited by Brent D. Slife, PhD; Jeffrey S. Reber, PhD; and Frank C. Richardson, PhD

BOOK COVER SPACER

LIST PRICE: $49.95
MEMBER/AFFILIATE PRICE: $39.95

295 pages
ITEM #: 4316048
ISBN: 1-59147-187-7
ISBN 13: 978-1-59147-187-5
PUBLICATION DATE: December 2004
EDITION: Hardcover

View the Table of Contents

SPACER
YOUR SHOPPING CART
TOP OF SHOPPING CART BOX
ADD TO CART
VIEW CART
CHECK OUT
SPACER

Copyright and Permissions

Request permission to reuse material from this book.

In Critical Thinking About Psychology: Hidden Assumptions and Plausible Alternatives contributors examine the unquestioned givens of psychology and suggest other ways of looking at them. Psychologists are taught early in their careers to use their research findings to examine common myths and debunk false beliefs. Yet, in spite of this emphasis on critical analysis, psychologists do not typically subject psychology itself to such evaluation. In this fascinating volume, experts from varied subdisciplines critique assumptions peculiar to their specialty and then propose alternatives to replace the original assumptions.

The book covers six major psychology subdisciplines, ranging from clinical psychology to neuropsychology. Contributors critique unquestioned tenets of the field such as the dualism between mind and body, the truth of efficient causation, and the discrete unit known as the individual. Authors then provide alternative ways of seeing the field, such as nondualistic models of the self and a moral vision of human development, effectively creating new conceptual ground for psychology.

In analyzing what is taken for granted, this volume teaches critical thinking skills at the same time that it moves psychology in exciting new directions.

SPACER