Advanced Studies in Psychology
Graduate-level inquiry into psychology as a discipline
About this series
This series is written for advanced undergraduate and graduate students of psychology. It engages the field as a discipline, examining foundational assumptions, theoretical frameworks, research methods, and the limits of psychological explanation. The work prioritizes conceptual rigor and disciplinary context over summary or persuasion.
Psychodynamic Theory Beyond the Clinic
This essay argues that psychodynamic theory should not be confined to clinical practice. It reframes psychodynamic concepts as interpretive tools for understanding motivation, defense, and meaning across social, organizational, and cultural contexts, where rational or behavioral models alone often fall short.
Integrative Models and the Fantasy of Theoretical Unity
This essay examines the enduring appeal of integrative models in psychology and argues that many function as fantasies of theoretical unity. It explores how attempts at synthesis often bypass genuine ontological conflict, replacing productive tension with rhetorical coherence and leaving core disagreements unresolved.
Neuroscience as Explanatory Shortcut
This essay explores the growing tendency to treat neuroscience as an explanatory endpoint in psychology. It argues that neural mechanisms, while invaluable, cannot replace psychological interpretation, and that collapsing levels of analysis risks mistaking biological detail for meaning, agency, and understanding.
Attachment Theory as a Developmental Meta-Model
This essay explores attachment theory’s evolution into a developmental meta-model. It argues that while attachment offers indispensable insight into relational regulation, its expansion into a totalizing framework risks oversimplifying development, underestimating plasticity, and conflating relational strategies with identity.
Emotion Theories as Competing Ontologies
This essay examines emotion theories as competing ontologies rather than rival mechanisms. It shows how basic emotion, appraisal, dimensional, and constructionist models presuppose different answers to what emotions are, shaping evidence, method, and application in ways that make simple integration impossible.
Dual-Process Models and the False Binary Problem
This essay examines dual-process models and their reliance on a false binary. It argues that while fast and slow processing distinctions capture real variation, treating them as discrete systems oversimplifies cognition, misrepresents emotion and expertise, and limits psychology’s ability to describe how thinking actually unfolds.
Cognitive Models and Their Unspoken Rationalist Biases
This essay explores the rationalist bias embedded in cognitive models, showing how assumptions about coherence and optimality shape explanations of thought, emotion, and distress. It argues for greater conceptual awareness of what cognitive frameworks illuminate, and what they simplify or exclude.
Trait Theories and the Problem of Psychological Stasis
This essay examines trait theories through the lens of psychological stasis. It argues that while traits efficiently summarize individual differences, they lack a robust account of development and change, leading to descriptive power without explanatory depth regarding how psychological continuity and transformation occur.
Learning Theory After the Decline of Behaviorism
This essay examines the fate of learning theory after behaviorism’s decline. It argues that while behaviorism’s limits were real, its collapse left learning under-theorized, fragmented across subfields, and reduced to mechanisms rather than treated as a central conceptual problem in psychology.
Personality Models as Cultural Artifacts
This essay examines personality models as cultural artifacts rather than neutral discoveries. It analyzes how trait frameworks emerge from specific linguistic, institutional, and historical contexts, and explores the implications of treating personality dimensions as culturally situated tools rather than comprehensive accounts of personhood.
Why No Grand Theory of Psychology Has Succeeded
This piece examines why psychology has repeatedly failed to produce a grand unified theory. It argues that psychological phenomena resist monistic explanation due to their developmental, cultural, and interpretive complexity. Rather than framing this as a weakness, the piece reframes pluralism as a structural necessity and calls for coordination and conceptual humility over theoretical sovereignty.
Computational Metaphors and the Shape of Psychological Explanation
This piece examines the role of computational metaphors in psychological theory, arguing that while they enabled precision and formal modeling, they also constrained what counts as legitimate explanation. Drawing on critiques by Fodor and Dreyfus, it shows how metaphors organize inquiry, privilege certain phenomena, and risk being mistaken for ontology rather than treated as provisional tools.
The Illusion of Theoretical Integration
This piece examines why many integrative efforts in psychological theory produce an illusion of coherence rather than genuine synthesis. It argues that integration requires adjudicating assumptions, not merely combining vocabularies, and that unexamined inclusiveness often masks unresolved theoretical conflict. The piece calls for coordination and conceptual clarity over premature unification.
Trait, State, or Narrative? Competing Models of Psychological Stability
This piece examines competing models of psychological stability in trait, state, and narrative frameworks. It argues that these approaches do not offer rival explanations of the same phenomenon, but instead capture different forms of continuity across time. By clarifying their assumptions, strengths, and limits, the piece calls for a layered understanding of stability rather than a zero-sum theoretical debate.
Reductionism as a Temperament, Not a Theory
This piece examines reductionism in psychology as an explanatory temperament rather than a formal theory. It argues that reductionism persists because it satisfies preferences for clarity, control, and causal depth, even when poorly matched to psychological phenomena. Drawing on James and Fodor, the piece calls for greater explanatory flexibility and discernment across levels of analysis.
When Models Become Moral Claims
This piece examines how psychological models often shift from descriptive frameworks into implicit moral claims. It analyzes how concepts such as rationality, regulation, and normal functioning embed value judgments that shape theory, application, and cross-cultural interpretation. The piece argues for making normativity explicit so that empirical adequacy and moral endorsement are not silently conflated.
Mechanism Is Not Meaning
This piece examines the distinction between mechanism and meaning in psychological theory. It argues that identifying causal processes does not exhaust explanation in a field concerned with lived experience, interpretation, and value. Drawing on thinkers such as Dilthey and Fodor, the piece calls for resisting the collapse of meaning into mechanism and for clarifying how different explanatory modes address different dimensions of psychological life.
Competing Explanations Can All Be Right (and Still Incomplete)
This piece examines why competing explanations in psychology can all be empirically supported yet remain incomplete. It argues that theoretical conflict often reflects differences in explanatory level rather than factual disagreement, and calls for disciplined pluralism that clarifies scope, assumptions, and limits instead of forcing premature unification or zero-sum resolution.
Models Are Not Mirrors: Why Psychological Theories Always Simplify
This piece examines why psychological theories function as simplifying models rather than mirrors of mental reality. It analyzes how models select and organize aspects of experience, how empirical success encourages reification, and why theoretical pluralism is often more appropriate than zero-sum competition. The piece argues for treating models as tools shaped by explanatory aims, not as comprehensive descriptions of mind.