History of Psychology: Aristotle, before 30 BC - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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History of Psychology: Aristotle, before 30 BC

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Title: History of Psychology: Aristotle, before 30 BC


1
History of Psychology Aristotle, before 30 BC
  • Greek naturalist and philosopher who theorized
    about learning, memory, motivation, emotion,
    perception, and personality.

2
René Descartes 1596-1650
  • Originated the concept of Dualism,
    viewed mind and body as
    interactive machines.
  • Stated that the mind could follow body and vice
    versa.
  • Proposed the idea of both voluntary and
    involuntary behavior.
  • Ruled out areas other than the brain
    for mental functioning.

3
John Locke 1632-1704
  • Knowledge should be acquired by careful
    observation.
  • No innate ideas all knowledge comes from
    experience or reflection.
  • Mind is a blank slate written on by experience
    (tabula rasa).

4
Dorothea Dix 1802 -1887
  • She was shocked and horrified by the treatment of
    the mentally ill
  • Became a social reformer
  • Spent 40 years lobbying U.S. and Canadian
    legislators to establish state hospitals for the
    mentally ill
  • Her efforts directly affected the building of 32
    institutions in the United States.

5
Charles Darwin 1850s
  • Studied the evolution of finches
    and expands his study to include humans.
  • Opposed religious teachings of the time by
    suggesting that man was a common ancestor to
    lower species.

6
Birth of Psychology Wilhelm Wundt Father of
Psychology
  • 1879 Leipzig, Germany.
  • Intended to make psychology a reputable
    science.
  • Many American psychologists eventually went on
    to study in Leipzeig in the 1st Psych Lab

7
Wilhelm Wundt Father
of Psychology
  • Most of his experiments on
    sensation and perception.
  • Did not think that high order mental processes
    could be studied experimentally.
  • Trained in medicine and philosophy.
  • Wrote many books about psychology, philosophy,
    ethics, and logic.

8
Can you read this?
  • This is bcuseae the huammn mnid deos not raed
    ervey lteter by istlef, but the word as a wlohe.
    Amzanig, huh?

9
Wilhelm Wundt
  • Wundts work led to the 1st school of thought in
    Psychology called STRUCTURALISM
  • Structuralism - focused on breaking down mental
    processes into the most basic components.
  • Researchers tried to understand the basic
    elements of consciousness using a method known as
    introspection.

10
Introspection
  • Looking inward at ones own mental processes.

11
E.B. Titchener
  • Wundts student.
  • Taught at Cornell University.
  • Structuralism He furthered Wundts work and
    understanding of human thought process.
  • Titchener coined term Structuralism

12
Margaret Floy Washburn
  • Student of Edward B. Titchener at the Sage School
    of Philosophy at Cornell University
  • There she was the first graduate student
    recommended by Titchener to the Ph.D. program,
    and became the first woman to obtain her Ph.D. in
    Psychology in 1894.  

13
Margaret Floy Washburn
  • Moved away from Titchener's structural psychology
  • Openly critical of its reduction of the mind into
    parts, and wrote a second book entitled Movement
    and Mental Imagery (1917)
  • 1903, she was ranked among the top 50
    psychologists in America (when women were
    excluded from many academic programs)

14
William James 1842-1910
  • Claimed that searching for building
    blocks was a waste of time because
    brain and mind are constantly changing focused
    on function.
  • Functionalism the study of how a mental process
    operates
  • Expanded psychology to animal behavior.
  • Author of 1st widely used Psych textbook
    Principles of Psychology

15
Structuralism to Functionalism(Wundt Tichener
to James and more)
  • A shift in early schools of though occurred in
    Psychology
  • the difference between stopping a train to tear
    it apart to study its parts (structuralism), and
    looking at how the systems interact while it is
    running (functionalism).

16
Mary Whiton Calkins1863-1930
  • Studied under William James at Harvard.
  • Admitted to Harvard as a "guest."
  • 1895 - Presented Doctoral thesis to Harvard
    faculty (Despite unanimous approval from the
    thesis committee)
  • Harvard still refused to grant Calkins the degree
    she had earned because she was a ____________

17
Mary Whiton Calkins
  • At Harvard, Calkins invented the paired-associate
    task
  • which involved showing study participants a
    series of paired colors and numerals, then
    testing recollections of which number had been
    paired with which color.
  • The technique was used to study memory and was
    later published by Titchener, who claimed credit
    for its development.

18
Mary Whiton Calkins
  • Is famous in Psychology because
  • First woman president of the American
    Psychological Association
  • Calkins wrote over a hundred professional papers
    of topics in psychology

19
American Psychological Association (APA)
  • Founded in 1892 the governing
    body of all research not conducted by
    universities.

20
American Psychological
Association
  • Largest scientific and professional organization
    representing psychology in the United States.
  • More than 134,000 researchers, educators,
    clinicians, consultants and students as its
    members.
  • Mission is to advance the creation,
    communication and application of psychological
    knowledge to benefit society and improve people's
    lives.

21
APA
  • Promoting research in psychology
  • Improving the qualifications and usefulness of
    psychologists by establishing high standards of
    ethics, conduct, education and achievement.

22
Herman Ebbinghaus 1885
  • Published classic studies on memory,
    nonsense syllables, learning curve.

23
G. Stanley Hall
  • First president of the APA, established the
    first psychological lab in the U.S.
    in 1883, at Johns Hopkins
    University.
  • Started the American Psychological Journal
    (1887) now the American Journal of
    Psychology.

24
Psychology Eclecticism
  • Utilizing of diverse theories and schools of
    thought.
  • Mosaic, no single approach can create the whole
    picture.
  • Unlikely for psychology to ever have a unifying
    paradigm.

25
Present Day PsychologyBehavioral Approach
  • All behavior is observable and measurable
  • Abandoned mentalism for behaviorism
  • All Behavior result of learning

26
Behaviorism
  • Ivan Pavlov, 1849-1936.
  • Russian experimenter who showed
    automatic/involuntary behavior in learned
    responses to specific stimuli in the
    environment.
  • Created Classical Conditioning.

27
Behaviorism
  • John Watson, 1913.
  • Psychology can never be as objective as
    chemistry or biology. Consciousness is not
    that easy.
  • I can take a child and make him into anything,
    a beggar, a doctor, a thief.

28
John. B. Watson
  • Baby Albert experiment
  • Used classical conditioning to teach baby to fear
    white fuzzy things (started with a rat)

29
Behaviorism
  • B.F. Skinner, 1950s.
  • Dismissed importance of inherited traits and
    instincts about human behavior
  • Believed that all behavior is a result of
    rewards and punishments in the past.
  • Any undesired behavior can be modified via
    positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement,
    and/or punishment

30
B.F. Skinner
  • Used the famous Skinner Box as the center of
    his research
  • Used rats and pigeons to explore what he called
    OPERANT conditioning

31
SKINNER BOX
32
Another form of a SKINNER BOX
33
Videos
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34
Albert Banduraborn 1925
  • Social Learning Theory How people acquire new
    behaviors by observing and imitating others
    (modeling).
  • Famous Bobo Doll Experiment
  • His criticisms of behaviorists All behavior
    cannot be explained by rewards and punishments.
    Treats people like robots as if they have no
    free-will.

35
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • All behavior is meaningful, and much of it is
    controlled by digging below the surface to
    uncover the roots of personality (unconscious
  • part of personality)

36
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Sigmund Freud, 1856-1939.
  • Studied neurology, but wanted to
    be a medical researcher, forced
    into being a private physician.
  • Became convinced that patients difficulties were
    due to mental rather than physical problems.
  • Proposed that distress due to problems that
    dated back to childhood.

37
Siggy Freud
  • Psychoanalysis Freuds therapy method for
    treating people with emotional problems, focus
    on unconscious mind, dream interpretation and
    free association
  • Unconscious Nearly all of our impulses are
    sexual and aggressive in nature.

38
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Interpretation of Dreams, 1900.
    Sold 600 copies in 8 years today sells
    millions every year.

39
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Hidden Desires Freud stated that people are
    cesspools of hidden desires.
  • Unresolved Conflicts If these occur in
    childhood, this will cause fixations in later
    life. (Stages)

40
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Freuds Stages Oral (Birth - 1 yr.),
    anal (1 yr.), phallic (4 yrs. -
    separates males/females), latency (Puberty),
    genital (adult)
  • 3 Personalities Id, Ego, Superego
  • Id Wants/Desires, Basic primal instincts.
    Pleasure Principle
  • Ego Reality Principle
  • Superego Conscious mind. Do the right thing.

41
Psychoanalytic Theory Criticisms
  • Does not focus on observable behavior
  • cannot be scientifically proven or disproven
  • Too dark negative view of human behavior
  • Ignores political and social explanations of
    peoples problems.

42
Like Freud Neo-Freudians
  • Neo-Freudians psychologists who agreed with
    the basis of Freud's psychoanalytic theory, but
    changed and adapted the theory to incorporate
    their own beliefs, ideas and theories.
  • Freud proposed a number of ideas that were highly
    controversial, but also attracted a number of
    followers.

43
Psychodynamic theory
  • Neo-Freudians
  • Currently focuses on perceptions, memories
    thinking in our unconscious

44
Carl Jung 1875-1961
  • Jung worked with psychiatric patients at the
    University of Zürich asylum
  • Worked with Freud
  • Jungs theories revolved around the unconscious
    mind
  • Eventually, Jung rejected Freud's emphasis on sex
    as the sole source of behavior motivation

45
Carl Jung 1875-1961
  • Human psyche exists in three parts the ego (the
    conscious mind), the personal unconscious and the
    collective unconscious.
  • collective unconscious was a reservoir of all the
    experience and knowledge of the human species

46
Alfred Adler 1870 -1937
  • Austrian, like Freud
  • Became president of Vienna Psychoanalytic Society
  • Adler eventually departed due in part to his
    disagreements with some of Freud's theories.
  • Adler had played a key role in the development of
    psychoanalysis

47
Alfred Adler 1870 -1937
  • Believed that every person has a sense of
    inferiority
  • 'striving for superiority' and believed that this
    drive was the motivating force behind human
    behaviors, emotions, and thoughts.
  • From childhood people work toward overcoming this
    inferiority

48
Humanistic Theory (1950-60s)
  • Strongly disagreed with both Behaviorists and
    psychoanalysts
  • Stress the importance of peoples feelings and
    free will
  • Believe humans are naturally positive and seek
    personal growth
  • People have the ability to heal themselves

49
Humanistic Theory
  • Humanism Existentialism
  • A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and
    isolation of the individual experience in a
    hostile or indifferent universe, regards human
    existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom
    of choice and responsibility for the consequences
    of one's acts.

50
Humanistic Theory
  • Abraham Maslow Hierarchy of Needs
    Peoples struggle is to be
    the best they possibly can, known
    as self-actualization.
  • Carl Rogers Former minister believed
    all people strive for perfection some
    interrupted by a bad environment.

51
Humanistic Theory
  • Criticisms Believes all people are good and
    that people have the ability to heal themselves.
    Too vague, more of a philosophy for life than
    a psychology.

52
Biopsychology / Biological Approach
  • Seeks to understand the nervous system. All
    actions, feelings associated with the nervous
    system.
  • The anatomy and physiology explanation for human
    thinking behavior
  • Wilhelm Wundt Expected psychology to rest
    almost solely on Anatomy and Biology. Interested
    in how bodily events interact with events in the
    external environment to produce perceptions,
    memory and behavior.

53
Biopsychology
  • Roger Sperry won Nobel-Prize for his Split-Brain
    research.
  • Weber, Fechner, Helmholtzs work on complex
    chemical and biological processes within nervous
    and endocrine system are related to behavior

54
Biopsychological (Neurobiological)
  • Nervous System Responsible for our behavior
    Specifically abnormal and immediate responses.
  • Anatomy/Biology Solely responsible for human
    behavior.
  • Criticisms Ignores mental processes. Explains
    too little of human behavior, rejects
    environmental influences.

55
Cognitive Theory
  • Thinking how mental thoughts affect behavior.
    Humanism gives rise to the Cognitive Theory.
  • Studies how we attend, perceive, think, remember,
    solve problems and arrive at beliefs.
  • Know whats going on in peoples heads first,
    then applies it to their behavior.

56
For Example
  • Cognitivists consider how human memory works to
    promote learning.
  • Study the physiological processes of sorting and
    encoding information and events into short-term
    memory and long-term memory

57
Gestalt Psychology
  • Gestalt Psychology means pattern or
    configuration.
  • Studies how people interpret sensory information
    in order to acquire knowledge.
  • The whole is larger than the sum of its parts

58
Gestalt Psychology
  • School of thought that looks at the human mind
    and behavior as a whole
  • Started with Max Wertheimer, 1883-1943
  • Gestalt psychology formed partially as a response
    to the structuralism (Wundt)

59
  • 199  188 - positivehealth.com

60
Example of Gestalt Principles
61
Gestalt
62
GestaltGot it?
63
Gestalt
64
What Artist is famous for using Gestalt ideas as
the essence of his creations?
65
M.C. Esher
66
Jean Piaget 1896-1980
  • Stages of Cognitive Development
  • Researched childrens cognitive development
  • Consist if 4 stages
  • Inferred mental processes from observable
    behavior
  • Children must accomplish mental tasks to prove
    they advanced to next stage

67
Cognitive Approach Criticisms
  • Downplays emotion, lack of free will

68
Sociocultural Psychology
  • Examines how cultural and political (religious)
    experience effect our everyday life.
  • Gender influences of behavior.
  • Job opportunities, politics to influence peoples
    goals and ambitions.

69
Sociocultural Psychology
  • It is NOT intrapsychic Within the mind or self.

70
Sociocultural Psychology
  • Criticisms Underestimated personal on our
    behavior Makes broad generalizations about
    ethnic groups and cultures.

71
Evolutionary Approach
  • Very biological approach
  • Human thinking and behavior are products of
    natural selection
  • Started with ideas of Charles Darwin
  • Evolutionary psychology postulates the mind and
    behavior is shaped by pressure to survive and
    reproduce

72
That is all your approaches ?
  • Now lets practice our new knowledge
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