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Table of Contents
Intro
Acknowledgment
Contents
Chapter 1: Ideological and Political Bias in Psychology: An Introduction
The Roots of Ideological and Political Conflicts
Liberal or Progressive Political Bias in Psychology
Text Overview
In Memorium
References
Part I: Bias and the Politics of Psychology
Chapter 2: What Is Meant by 'Bias' in Psychological Science?
The Essential Nature of the Scientific Enterprise
The Universal Problem of Bias
The Essential Nature and Products of Psychological Science
The Deterioration of Scientific Standards
What Is Bias in Psychological Science?
What Bias Is Not
Biases Studied by Psychological Science
Distilling the Essence of (Detrimental) Biases in Psychological Science
What Conditions Appear to Create, Support, and Perpetuate the Existence of Bias in Psychological Science?
Human Errors/Foibles
Deep Personal Convictions
Following the Crowd
The 'Publish or Perish' Academic Environment
Are There Any Situations in Which Bias Is Good?
Summary and Next Steps
References
Chapter 3: What Is Meant by 'Politics of Psychology'?
Colloquial Usage of the Term 'Politics'
The Psychology of Politics Versus the Politics of Psychology
The Psychology of Politics
Basic Definitions
Political Differences Are the Source of Interindividual and Intergroup Conflict
The Politics of Psychology
A Brief History of Psychology's Efforts to Identify and Counteract Political Bias
Politicized Topics Within Psychology
Abortion (Psychological Effects Of)
Evolutionary Psychology (EP)
(The) Military
Racial Issues
Sex, Sexuality, and Gender Issues
The Purpose of This Text
References
Chapter 4: Psychologists' Politics
Political Attitudes of Psychology Professors, Students, Practitioners, and Consumers
Professors
Students
Practitioners
Consumers of Psychological Services
Summary and Directions for Future Research
Why Are Most Psychologists Liberal?
Conclusion
References
Chapter 5: Political Bias in the Social Sciences: A Critical, Theoretical, and Empirical Review
The Massive Left Skew of Academia
Political Biases Are Irrelevant to Topics That Are Not Politicized
Arguments and Evidence That Normal Academic Processes Prevent Political Biases
Personality and Individual Differences
Peer Review and the Norms of Science
Are Left-Leaning Studies Less Replicable?
Arguments and Evidence That Normal Academic Processes Fail to Prevent Political Biases
Personality and Individual Differences
Failures of Peer Review
Norms of Science
A Critical Evaluation of Reinero et al. (2020): A Bad Hypothesis Badly Tested
Models of Political Bias Manifestation
The Pipeline Model
Step 1: A Political Purity Spiral
Step 2: Rewards, Punishment, Work Environment, Scholarship
Step 3: Activist Rhetoric and Policies
Acknowledgment
Contents
Chapter 1: Ideological and Political Bias in Psychology: An Introduction
The Roots of Ideological and Political Conflicts
Liberal or Progressive Political Bias in Psychology
Text Overview
In Memorium
References
Part I: Bias and the Politics of Psychology
Chapter 2: What Is Meant by 'Bias' in Psychological Science?
The Essential Nature of the Scientific Enterprise
The Universal Problem of Bias
The Essential Nature and Products of Psychological Science
The Deterioration of Scientific Standards
What Is Bias in Psychological Science?
What Bias Is Not
Biases Studied by Psychological Science
Distilling the Essence of (Detrimental) Biases in Psychological Science
What Conditions Appear to Create, Support, and Perpetuate the Existence of Bias in Psychological Science?
Human Errors/Foibles
Deep Personal Convictions
Following the Crowd
The 'Publish or Perish' Academic Environment
Are There Any Situations in Which Bias Is Good?
Summary and Next Steps
References
Chapter 3: What Is Meant by 'Politics of Psychology'?
Colloquial Usage of the Term 'Politics'
The Psychology of Politics Versus the Politics of Psychology
The Psychology of Politics
Basic Definitions
Political Differences Are the Source of Interindividual and Intergroup Conflict
The Politics of Psychology
A Brief History of Psychology's Efforts to Identify and Counteract Political Bias
Politicized Topics Within Psychology
Abortion (Psychological Effects Of)
Evolutionary Psychology (EP)
(The) Military
Racial Issues
Sex, Sexuality, and Gender Issues
The Purpose of This Text
References
Chapter 4: Psychologists' Politics
Political Attitudes of Psychology Professors, Students, Practitioners, and Consumers
Professors
Students
Practitioners
Consumers of Psychological Services
Summary and Directions for Future Research
Why Are Most Psychologists Liberal?
Conclusion
References
Chapter 5: Political Bias in the Social Sciences: A Critical, Theoretical, and Empirical Review
The Massive Left Skew of Academia
Political Biases Are Irrelevant to Topics That Are Not Politicized
Arguments and Evidence That Normal Academic Processes Prevent Political Biases
Personality and Individual Differences
Peer Review and the Norms of Science
Are Left-Leaning Studies Less Replicable?
Arguments and Evidence That Normal Academic Processes Fail to Prevent Political Biases
Personality and Individual Differences
Failures of Peer Review
Norms of Science
A Critical Evaluation of Reinero et al. (2020): A Bad Hypothesis Badly Tested
Models of Political Bias Manifestation
The Pipeline Model
Step 1: A Political Purity Spiral
Step 2: Rewards, Punishment, Work Environment, Scholarship
Step 3: Activist Rhetoric and Policies