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ABSTRACT. This article reexamines a number of methodological and procedural issues raised by Meehl (1967, 1978) that seem to question the rationality of psychological inquiry. The first issue concerns the asymmetry in theory testing between psychology and physics and the resulting paradox that, because the psychological null hypothesis is always false, increases in precision in psychology always lead to weaker tests of a theory, whereas the converse is true in physics. The second issue, related to the first, regards the slow progress observed in psychological research and the seeming unwillingness of social scientists to take seriously the Popperian requirements for intellectual honesty. We propose a good-enough principle to resolve Meehls methodological paradox and appeal
Serlin et al. (Tue,) studied this question.