Is 2012 Real
Psychology, unlike many of the other sciences, doesn't have a canon of
uncontested facts," says Mark Levine, PhD, of the University of Exeter,
who co-authored the American Psychologist article. "Because of
this, psychology textbooks are not made up of facts students must learn.
Instead, they are full of experiments and research techniques. Parables
like the Kitty Genovese story serve to link the experiments to the real
world. There is thus a strong incentive not to abandon the stories in
the textbooks, even if the stories themselves are on shaky ground."
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