NPR

A New Goal: Aim To Be Less Wrong

When beginning from the assumption that you are wrong, a criticism may be easier to construe as a helpful pointer, says psychologist Tania Lombrozo.
Source: H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock

At a conference last week, I received an interesting piece of advice:

"Assume you are wrong."

The advice came from Brian Nosek, a fellow psychology professor and the executive director of the Center for Open Science. Nosek wasn't objecting to any particular claim I'd made — he was offering a strategy for pursuing better science, and for encouraging others to do the same.

To understand the context for Nosek's advice, we need to take a step back — to the nature of science itself, and to a methodological revolution that's been shaking the field of psychology.

You see, despite what many of us learned in elementary school, there is no scientific method. Just. — which we now take for granted as a method for evaluating the causal efficacy of a drug — was a methodological innovation. — which is often taken for granted as a method for evaluating the probability that an outcome was due to chance alone — was a methodological innovation.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from NPR

NPR6 min read
NPR Suspends Veteran Editor As It Grapples With His Public Criticism
NPR has suspended Senior Editor Uri Berliner after he wrote an essay accusing the public radio network of becoming too progressive in its news coverage and losing the public's trust.
NPR1 min readInternational Relations
James Hider Is NPR's New Middle East Editor
In a note to newsroom staff, Didrik Schanche, Chief International Editor, made the following announcement: I am pleased to announce that veteran journalist James Hider is NPR's new Middle East editor. James has been filling in as temporary Middle Ea
NPR4 min read
Finally! Tough New Safety Rules On Silica Dust Are Out To Protect Miners' Lungs
Addressing a problem first identified 50 years ago, federal regulators say stricter new rules to limit miners' exposure to silica dust are expected to finally go on the books on Tuesday.

Related Books & Audiobooks