The study of how entire frameworks of scientific thought emerge, stabilize, and eventually collapse—and how the psychology of scientists shapes these processes. Paradigms aren't just sets of theories; they're ways of seeing, communities of belief, and sources of identity. The psychology of paradigms examines why scientists resist revolutionary ideas (cognitive conservatism, career investment, social pressure), how paradigms shift despite resistance (anomalies accumulate, young scientists defect, the old guard retires), and what it feels like to live through a scientific revolution (exhilarating for the victors, devastating for the vanquished). Understanding this psychology reveals that science progresses not despite human nature but through it—through passion, stubbornness, competition, and the eventual triumph of evidence over ego.
Example: "He lived through a paradigm shift in his field and watched the psychology play out in real time—older scientists defending ideas they'd built careers on, younger ones eager to tear them down, the gradual tipping point where the new view became unstoppable. The psychology of scientific paradigms explained why it took so long: not because the evidence was weak, but because people are people."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Scientific Paradigms mug.