ABSTRACT

This book declines to take for granted the widespread assumption that existing psychometric procedures provide scientific measurement. The currently fashionable concepts of measurement within psychology -- operationalism and representationalism -- are critically examined, and the classical view, that measurement is the assessment of quantity, is defended. Within this framework, it is shown how conjoint measurement can be used to test the hypothesis that variables are quantitative. This theme is developed in detail using familiar psychological examples, such as Thurstone's law of comparative judgment, multidimensional scaling, and Coombs' theory of unfolding.

part I|87 pages

Theory

part 1|18 pages

Some History

chapter 1|16 pages

Making the Myth of Mental Measurement

part 2|67 pages

And Philosophy

chapter 2|27 pages

The Theory of Measurement in Psychology

chapter 3|15 pages

What Quantity and Measurement Really are

chapter 4|21 pages

Searching for Quantity

part II|76 pages

Applications

chapter 5|17 pages

Thurstone's Theory of Comparative Judgment

chapter 6|19 pages

The Theory of Multidimensional Scaling

chapter 7|19 pages

Coombs' Theory of Unfolding