After literally 2 years, I’ve finally finished making notes on Paul Meehl’s philosophy of science lectures. This is the portal to all the different lectures. I’ve also included a single sentence summary of them. They are excellent and I strongly recommend you watch them. However, his papers are the best scientific articles I have ever read of any topic. I sincerely believe they should be required reading for anyone considering working in psychology. Consequently, I’ve included a few recommendations (along with a short summary) below.

Lectures

Lecture 1: Philosophy of science in the 19th and 20th century

Lecture 2: Popper, Bayes theorem, & Lakatos

Lecture 3: Theories of truth

Lecture 4: Different kinds of theories

Lecture 5: The Lakatosian defence and research programs

Lecture 6: Lakatosian retreat and the 10 obfuscating factors

Lecture 7: 10 obfuscating factors

Lecture 8: How to test your theory

Lecture 9: Theories of probability

Lecture 10: Clinical versus statistical prediction

Lecture 11: How scientific is psychoanalysis?

Lecture 12: The weakness of significance tests and the corroboration index

Papers

Theory-testing in psychology and physics: a methodological paradox (1967). A wonderfully written paper demonstrating how the way statistics is used in soft sciences (with point-null hypotheses and vague directional hypotheses) results in weaker evidence for a theory given greater measurement accuracy. A genuinely eye-opening read.

Theoretical risks and tabular asterisks: Sir Karl, Sir Ronald, and the slow progress of soft psychology (1978) . An in-depth look into why psychology struggles with stronger tests and how it can be improved.

What social scientists don’t understand (1986). How weak tests of theory lead us to believe it has “money in the bank” and how a research program is stronger than it really is while publication bias further muddies the water.

Why summaries of research on psychological theories are often uninterpretable (1990). The 10 factors described mean you can’t judge how true a psychological theory is based on looking at how many corroborating significant results it has .