Comment by kelseyfrog
1 day ago
My exposure to Sociology and Psychology at university made me understand that HN's resistance to sociology stems from the discomfort of being confronted with uncomfortable truths. It's easier to discount sociology than deal with these truths. I get it. I used to be that way too.
Sure, but what evidence is there of that claim? Do you have any falsifiable/empirical studies you can cite?
Of course. But my only requirement is that we pre-register what evidence will change your mind. Fair?
The study should tackle these questions in one form or another:
1. What specific, measurable phenomenon would constitute 'discomfort with uncomfortable truths' versus legitimate methodological concerns?
2. How would we distinguish between the two empirically?
I'd expect a study or numerical analysis with at least n > 1000, and p < 0.05 - The study will ideally have controls for correlation, indicating strong causation. The study (or cross analyses of it) should also explore alternative explanations, either disproving the alternatives or showing that they have weak(er) significance (also through numerical methods).
I'm not sure what kinds of data this result could be derived from, but the methods for getting that data should be cited and common - thus being reproducible. Data could also be collected by examining alternative "inputs" (independent variables: i.e. temperament towards discomfort), or by testing how inducing discomfort leads to resistance to ideas, or something else.
I'd expect the research to include, for example, controls where the same individuals evaluate methodologically identical studies from other fields. We'd need to show this 'resistance' is specific to sociology, not general scientific skepticism.
That's to say: The study should also show, numerically and repeatably, that there are legitimate correlations between sociological studies inducing discomfort, and that it is not actual methodological concerns.
This would include:
1. Validated scales measuring "discomfort" or cognitive dissonance
2. Behavioural indicators of resistance vs. legitimate critique
3. Control groups exposed to equally challenging but methodologically sound research
4. Control groups exposed to less challenging but equally methodologically sound research (to the level of sociology)
Also, since we're making a claim about psychology and causation, the study would ideally be conducted by researchers outside of sociology departments to avoid conflicts of interest - preferably cognitive psychologists or neuroscientists using their methodological standards.
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