Abstract

Pristine inner experience is that which is directly present in awareness before it is distorted by attempts at observation or interpretation. Many psychological methods, including most introspective methods, attempt to measure some aspect of pristine inner experience (thoughts, feelings, mental imagery, sensations, etc.). We believe, however, that these methods produce unspecifiable combinations of pristine inner experience, beliefs about the self, beliefs about what inner experience should be like, inaccurate recollections, miscommunications, and other confounding influences. We argue that descriptive experience sampling (DES) can produce high fidelity descriptions of pristine inner experience. These descriptions are used to create idiographic profiles, carefully crafted, in-depth characterizations of the pristine inner experience of individuals. We believe these profiles, because they are built from moments apprehended via a method that confronts the challenges inherent in examining inner experience, are uniquely valuable in advancing the science of inner experience and psychology broadly. For example, DES observations raise important questions about the veracity of results gathered via questionnaires and other introspective methods, like casual introspection. DES findings also provide high fidelity phenomenological data that can be useful for those developing psychological theories, such as theories of emotional processing. Additionally, DES procedures may allow clinicians and clients to practice valuable skills, like bracketing presuppositions and attending to internal experiences. This paper will describe difficulties inherent in the study of pristine inner experience and discuss implications of high fidelity descriptions of pristine inner experience for psychological research, theory development, and clinical practice.

Highlights

  • Psychology, as a science and a profession, relies heavily on introspection

  • Questionnaires that ask Implications of Inner Experience for Psychology participants to report on thoughts or feelings require introspection

  • Descriptive experience sampling (DES) is an introspective method that was designed to confront these concerns in order to describe pristine inner experience in high fidelity

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Introspection can be defined as “looking into our own minds and reporting what we discover” (Boring, 1953). Using this definition, introspection includes any effort made by research participants or psychotherapy clients to reflect on their personal, inner experiences and describe that experience, whether through dialog, written summary, or rating scale (Boring, 1953; Clegg, 2012). Implications of Inner Experience for Psychology participants to report on thoughts or feelings require introspection. Sensation research, such as threshold discrimination tasks, require introspection. Behavioral research and interventions are integral to psychology, a science without the mind, and a science without introspection, would be incomplete

PRISTINE INNER EXPERIENCE
DESCRIPTIVE EXPERIENCE SAMPLING
VERACITY OF INTROSPECTIVE REPORTS
THEORETICAL USEFULNESS OF PRISTINE INNER EXPERIENCE
CLINICAL UTILITY OF DES SKILLS
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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