However, from what I can see on the internet, there doesn't seem to be much scientific support for graphology, so I'll vote woo
The scientific study of graphology (handwriting analysis) has had a long history. Many practitioners believe that graphology is a valuable selection aid and use this technique in a selection context, and in some European countries it is quite well thought of. While a few articles have proposed that graphology is a valid and useful selection technique, the overwhelming results of well-controlled empirical studies have been that the technique has not demonstrated acceptable validity. A review of relevant literature regarding both theory and research indicates that, while the procedure may have an intuitive appeal, graphology should not be used in a selection context.
Graphologists believe such details can reveal as much about a person as astrology , palm reading, psychometry,rumpology, or the Myers-Briggs personality type indicator. However, there is no evidence that the unconscious mind is a reservoir of truth about a person, much less that graphology provides a gateway to that reservoir.
Psychology is the science of mental processes and behavior.
Skeptic Guy, can you really call Psychology a science as you would call Physics, Chemistry, Biology etc. a science?
The ones I have mentioned are 100% experimental and will always give the results you expect it to because you know the fundamental nature laws associated with them. In psychology there are no 100% predictions and if you will give a certain person two psychological tests at two different times, that person may get two different results based on his mood, tiredness, and what not condition he was in at that time. That is why I do not call it science. I refer you to:
www.arachnoid.com which states:
(SNIP)
How reliable is graphology?
Yair
Graphology qualifies for Randi's prize, if that helps-- the only thing people can tell better than chance from handwriting is gender. Not personality.
I'm going to go with the publications listed below...
http://www.psychology.org/links/Publ.../Experimental/
http://www.psychology.org/links/Publications/Clinical/
http://www.psychology.org/links/Publications/Cognitive/
Psychologists make observations of human behavior, develop theories to explain their causes, and design experiments to test those theories. So yes, they are scientists. I'm not sure where this idea of a "100% prediction" rate comes from, other than from Sylvia Browne's web site.
I never heard that some area must be 100% whatever for it to be deemed science
Again, as I have already stated, knowledge in psychology is gathered in scientific methods but that does not make it science per se.Psychologists make observations of human behavior, develop theories to explain their causes, and design experiments to test those theories
This is correct but not very relevant in this discussion because I'm not talking about experimental accuracy errors. It is obvious that we cannot measure anything in absolute accuracy.No science predicts at 100%. There are inherent limitations in any means of observation--our predictions will vary within those limits.
A friend of mine, just a normal every day guy, and one of the gentlest and warm hearted guys I've ever known, went to Portugal to apply for a job, what job I have forgotten, I think it had something to do with selling properties. Anyhow, he was well recieved, the interview went splendid, and it all seemed a sure thing... Until, suddenly everything changed, he was suddenly treated like a paria and literally thrown out. What happened?
As a part of the application process they made him take a graphology test, and according to the test results he was a psychopath and had murderous tendencies. He took a flight home all devestated, and I think it took him quite a long time to get over that.
So, not only is it complete bogus and totally unreliable, it is also directly harmful when used like this, and I think it is rather common in parts of Europe to use it like this. It can mark people out as psychopaths and potential murderers without any base in reality at all.
My father (major anti-woo) fired a guy that was hiring PAs based on handwriting, once.
As a part of the application process they made him take a graphology test, and according to the test results he was a psychopath and had murderous tendencies. He took a flight home all devestated, and I think it took him quite a long time to get over that.
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Im amazed that this sort of thing is taken seriously.....hopefully with the age of computers it'll die out - until they "learn" to analyse typing styles....
Skeptic Guy, can you really call Psychology a science as you would call Physics, Chemistry, Biology etc. a science?
The ones I have mentioned are 100% experimental and will always give the results you expect it to because you know the fundamental nature laws associated with them.
In psychology there are no 100% predictions
If Psychology isn't a science, then how did I get a bachelors of sciences in it?
Not really. Our department is in the Science division and is housed in the Life Sciences building with biology.It's just a matter of taste - there is a fundamental divide between the social sciences and the natural sciences - one seeks to describe the world within, the other the world without...the latter strives to present an objective reality while the former seeks to describe our subjective reality.ll.