Abstract
This article discusses the respective contributions of scientific and clinical epistemologies to formulating expert opinions
in personal injury and other forensic cases involving psychological testimony. It argues that each epistemology provides specific
truth criteria that, though different, are both objective. It analyzes the reasons that some experts malign clinical judgments;
compares each epistemology’s approach to truth; and identifies their respective roles in forensic assessments. It expands
the scientific meanings of internal and external validity so that they apply to clinical evidence and then uses them to propose
a schema for supporting or falsifying expert opinions as a whole. It concludes by discussing risks created by preferring one
epistemology to the other, rather than appreciating their complementary roles.
in personal injury and other forensic cases involving psychological testimony. It argues that each epistemology provides specific
truth criteria that, though different, are both objective. It analyzes the reasons that some experts malign clinical judgments;
compares each epistemology’s approach to truth; and identifies their respective roles in forensic assessments. It expands
the scientific meanings of internal and external validity so that they apply to clinical evidence and then uses them to propose
a schema for supporting or falsifying expert opinions as a whole. It concludes by discussing risks created by preferring one
epistemology to the other, rather than appreciating their complementary roles.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-13
- DOI 10.1007/s12207-011-9104-5
- Authors
- Madelyn Simring Milchman, Upper Montclair, NJ, USA
- Journal Psychological Injury and Law
- Online ISSN 1938-9728
- Print ISSN 1938-971X