
Psychology, Political Psychology and International Relations
Author(s) -
Isabella Hermann
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
politikon
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1583-3984
pISSN - 2414-6633
DOI - 10.22151/politikon.18.5
Subject(s) - irrationality , political psychology , theoretical psychology , rationality , psychology , empirical psychology , epistemology , philosophy of psychology , asian psychology , cross cultural psychology , critical psychology , field (mathematics) , international psychology , mathematical psychology , popular psychology , social psychology , differential psychology , politics , basic science , psychoanalysis , cognitive psychology , psychology, philosophy and physiology , political science , law , philosophy , mathematics , pure mathematics
Psychology and international relations theory (IR) share an ambivalent relationship. On the one side psychology is neglected within the theory building of IR, on the other side there exists a large history of psychological approaches within the discipline, as well as interdisciplinary research in the field of political psychology. However, leaving psychology out of IR is not understandable from a psychological point of view since the differentiation between “rationality” on the one side and “irrationality” as psychology on the other side is artificial and contra-empirical. Systematically and naturally incorporating psychology – as for example motives and emotions – in IR would mean to understand international phenomena more profoundly and closer to reality.