The term is often derogatory, used to describe psychological concepts that are oversimplified, out of date, unproven, misunderstood or misinterpreted; however, the term may also be used to describe professionally-produced psychological knowledge, regarded by most experts as valid and effective, that is intended for use by the general public.
Types of popular psychology
Popular psychology commonly takes the form of:
- self help books, for example The Road Less Travelled, by M. Scott Peck;
- advice dispensed through radio, TV, and print; for example Dear Abby and Dr. Phil;
- myths such as "People use only about 10% of their brain's capacity;
- concepts that may or may not have a basis in psychology, such as inner child, left brain/right brain, emotional intelligence, freudian slip, fight-or-flight response, and enneagram;
- public perceptions about psychological methodologies that have not been fully scientifically validated, such as neuro-linguistic programming;
- urban legends such as "Psychologist B. F. Skinner raised his own daughter in a 'Skinner box'
Popular psychology and self-help
Popular psychology is an essential ingredient of the gigantic self help industry.According to Fried and Schultis, criteria for a good self-help book include "claims made by the author as to the book's efficacy, the presentation of problem-solving strategies based on scientific evidence and professional experience, the clarity of the writing, the author's credentials and professional experience, and the inclusion of a bibliography."
Three potential dangers of self-help books are:
- people may falsely label themselves as psychologically disturbed;
- people may misdiagnose themselves and use material that deals with the wrong problem;
- people may not be able to evaluate a program and may select an ineffective one;
Pop psychologists
Some figures/movements characterized at varying times as exponents of pop psychology include:
- Lucinda Bassett
- Melody Beattie
- John Bradshaw
- Tony Buzan
- Edward De Bono
- Wayne Dyer
- Werner Erhard
- L. Ron Hubbard/Scientology
- David Icke
- Phil McGraw ("Dr Phil")
- Anthony Robbins
- Steven Pinker
See also
Further reading
- Mark Jarzombek, The Psychologizing of Modernity. Cambridge University Press, 2000.
- Justman, Stewart. Fool's paradise : the unreal world of pop psychology. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2005. ISBN 1566636280.
- Stewart argues that influential self-help gurus misuse the rhetoric of civil rights and 1960s dissent in preaching liberation from guilt, "artificial distinctions," and virtually everything else in the pursuit of self-realization.
- Cordón, Luis A. Popular psychology : an encyclopedia. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2005. ISBN 0313324573.
- The goal is "to try to counteract the tide of misleading information about the field of psychology with a concise guide to some things that the well-informed student of psychology and the interested general public ought to know."
References
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Last updated on Thursday July 24, 2008 at 03:21:03 PDT (GMT -0700)
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The term is often derogatory, used to describe psychological concepts that are oversimplified, out of date, unproven, misunderstood or misinterpreted; however, the term may also be used to describe professionally-produced psychological knowledge, regarded by most experts as valid and effective, that is intended for use by the general public.
Types of popular psychology
Popular psychology commonly takes the form of:
- self help books, for example The Road Less Travelled, by M. Scott Peck;
- advice dispensed through radio, TV, and print; for example Dear Abby and Dr. Phil;
- myths such as "People use only about 10% of their brain's capacity;
- concepts that may or may not have a basis in psychology, such as inner child, left brain/right brain, emotional intelligence, freudian slip, fight-or-flight response, and enneagram;
- public perceptions about psychological methodologies that have not been fully scientifically validated, such as neuro-linguistic programming;
- urban legends such as "Psychologist B. F. Skinner raised his own daughter in a 'Skinner box'
Popular psychology and self-help
Popular psychology is an essential ingredient of the gigantic self help industry.According to Fried and Schultis, criteria for a good self-help book include "claims made by the author as to the book's efficacy, the presentation of problem-solving strategies based on scientific evidence and professional experience, the clarity of the writing, the author's credentials and professional experience, and the inclusion of a bibliography."
Three potential dangers of self-help books are:
- people may falsely label themselves as psychologically disturbed;
- people may misdiagnose themselves and use material that deals with the wrong problem;
- people may not be able to evaluate a program and may select an ineffective one;
Pop psychologists
Some figures/movements characterized at varying times as exponents of pop psychology include:
- Lucinda Bassett
- Melody Beattie
- John Bradshaw
- Tony Buzan
- Edward De Bono
- Wayne Dyer
- Werner Erhard
- L. Ron Hubbard/Scientology
- David Icke
- Phil McGraw ("Dr Phil")
- Anthony Robbins
- Steven Pinker
See also
Further reading
- Mark Jarzombek, The Psychologizing of Modernity. Cambridge University Press, 2000.
- Justman, Stewart. Fool's paradise : the unreal world of pop psychology. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2005. ISBN 1566636280.
- Stewart argues that influential self-help gurus misuse the rhetoric of civil rights and 1960s dissent in preaching liberation from guilt, "artificial distinctions," and virtually everything else in the pursuit of self-realization.
- Cordón, Luis A. Popular psychology : an encyclopedia. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2005. ISBN 0313324573.
- The goal is "to try to counteract the tide of misleading information about the field of psychology with a concise guide to some things that the well-informed student of psychology and the interested general public ought to know."
References
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