We comment on the article by Zagaria et al., which explicates the ““soft” nature of psychology: a minor consensus in its “core”” (Zagaria et al., p. 1), manifested by the discordant character of definitions of psychological “core-constructs”. Zagaria et al. build on the assumption that psychological science should reside in the status of a paradigm, meanwhile the real state of things they consider as pre-paradigmatic, imperfect and unhealthy, from which a transition to a paradigm is necessary. We cannot agree with this provision. We argue that not internal coherence and consistency, but the ability to reflect multifaceted reality, to answer its innovative manifestations in various dimensions and solve tasks that life poses to humanity with an adequate set of different tools not reducible to a single approach, is what makes the value of science. Psychology originally developed as poly paradigmatic science, because its subject has a most complex nature, holistic, yet incorporating many aspects different in their essence and, therefore, requiring different versions of the methodology. Considering epistemology of psychological science from the philosophical perspective implying special focus on the ontological issues, we argue that poly paradigmatic structure of psychology is a virtue, not weakness. Thanks to such a structure, modular, like a Swiss knife, our science may offer the most effective solutions for a variety of problems. Multiplicity of relative approaches is best fit for life and innovation, even though we have to sacrifice rigor and concordance of definitions in introductory textbooks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)604-612
Number of pages9
JournalIntegrative Psychological and Behavioral Science
Volume54
Issue number3
Early online date27 Apr 2020
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2020

    Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies
  • Communication
  • Anthropology
  • Philosophy
  • Social Psychology
  • Applied Psychology

    Research areas

  • Changing modernity, Crisis of psychology, Epistemology, Evolution of science, Innovations, Ontology, Paradigms in psychology, Philosophy of science, Clay, Humans, Knowledge

ID: 53181003