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Randall Paul's avatar

Paul, Thanks for this interesting piece. You would enjoy our U of Chicago standing quip:

It makes sense it practice, but does it work in theory?

Best wishes,

Randall Paul

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Sean Trott's avatar

I think this is a good argument and in general I’m very supportive of controlled studies that falsify theories—but that said, the extent to which a controlled lab study is useful or informative basically corresponds to whether it is, in fact, engaged in theory falsification. If a lab study is merely providing evidence consistent with a theory (or if the theory is not articulated with sufficient precision), then it’s mostly a kind of existence proof: there’s at least one setting under which the theory’s predictions hold. Not useless, but not as theoretically (or practically) impactful. I find that psychophysics and much of cognitive psychology does do deductive, falsification-based work—but that’s not always the case.

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