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History of Psychology:
One hundred years of laws in psychology
RAND B. EVANS,
Editor
East Carolina University
KARL HALVOR TEIGEN
Department of Psychology, University of Tromsø
Mainstream psychology in the 20th century has been conceived as a nomothetic
science, but few psychological "laws" have been proposed. A PsycLit search
of journal abstracts from 1900 to 1999 yielded a total of 3,093 "law" citations,
or 22 per 10,000 entries, with two psychophysical laws (Weber's law and
Stevens's power law) and two learning laws (Herrnstein's matching law and
Thorndike's law of effect) as the most frequently cited. The number of law citations
has been decreasing throughout the century, to 10 per 10,000 entries
in the last decade, with few references to laws of recent origin. This could be
the result of increasing doubts about the lawfulness of psychological processes
coupled with a general preference for less ambitious terms (such as effects, principles,
models, or functions).
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