Famous Social Scientists - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Famous Social Scientists

Description:

Famous Social Scientists Review Piaget Stages of Cognitive Development Sensorimotor (birth 2) Object permanence Direct sensory experience Preoperational (2 7 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:114
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: DVande4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Famous Social Scientists


1
Famous Social Scientists
  • Review

2
Piaget
  • Stages of Cognitive Development
  • Sensorimotor (birth ? 2)
  • Object permanence
  • Direct sensory experience
  • Preoperational (2 ? 7)
  • Simple symbols
  • Egocentric
  • Concrete Operational (7 ? 11)
  • Conservation/Complex Operations
  • See others point of view
  • Formal Operational (12 ?)
  • Abstract thought
  • Use of logic and evidence

3
Freud
Superego
Id
Ego
  • Defense Mechanisms
  • Deny/distort reality
  • Act unconsciously

4
Freud
http//www.discunlimited.com/images/company_assets
/512f1c7f-0d64-4a5e-9d91-785dc064755f/Image/Resear
ch/FreudsIcebergModel.bmp
5
Freud
  • Id pleasure principle - innate
  • Ego reality principle - learned
  • Superego conscience - learned
  • If Ego cant maintain balance between Id and
    Superego, then defense mechanisms
  • Psychoanalysis
  • dream analysis, hypnosis and free associations
  • reveal unconscious

6
Freud
  • Stages of Psychosexual Development
  • Oral Stage (0-1 year)
  • Anal Stage (1-3 years)
  • Phallic Stage (3-5/6 years)
  • Latency Period (5/6 puberty)
  • Genital Stage (puberty maturity)
  • The events of psychosexual development may lead
    to fixations later on in adult life

7
Jung
  • Unconscious split into individual and collective
  • Individual Unconscious
  • contains selfish drives and individual experience
  • Collective Unconscious
  • Archetypes common to all
  • Two personality types
  • Extrovert desire and interest directed to
    others
  • Introvert desire and interest directed to self

http//www.jungneworleans.org/images/JungMandalaLa
rge.jpg
8
Maslow
  • Theory of motivation Hierarchy of Human Needs
  • Needs range from low (food and water) to high
    (self actualization)
  • Lower needs must be met before higher ones

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thum
b/5/58/Maslow27s_hierarchy_of_needs.svg/800px-Mas
low27s_hierarchy_of_needs.svg.png
9
Erikson
  • Focused on child development
  • Concerned with identity crises
  • Contributed eight stages of life
  • Each stage offers a crisis that must be resolved
  • Success at later stages depends on ability to
    resolve earlier crises
  • Overcoming crises successfully leads to healthy
    personality development
  • Inability to resolve crises can lead to unhealthy
    development
  • Personality develops through lifetime
  • Expands on Freuds infancy theories
  • Extends development to late adulthood

10
Adler
  • motivating force is sense of inferiority
  • People strive for perfection
  • People try to overcome with compensation
  • Striving towards perfection or superiority
  • Compensation can be too great (overcompensation
    superiority complex)
  • Birth Order can influence personality

http//cheekygen.blogspot.com/2008/06/birth-order-
and-siblings-rivalry.html
11
Sheldon
  • Behavior explained by body type
  • Endomorph round
  • Mesomorph muscular
  • Ectomorph thin
  • Temperament is related to body type
  • Somatotypes

http//www.umsl.edu/keelr/pics/somato3.jpg
12
Kohlberg
  • Piaget found 2 stages of moral thought
  • moral realism concern with consequences
  • moral autonomy concern with reasons
  • Morality motivates behavior
  • Extended Piagets 2 stages to 6

LEVEL STAGE SOCIAL ORIENTATION
Pre-conventional 1 Obedience and Punishment
2 Individualism
Conventional 3 Good boy/girl
4 Law and Order
Post-conventional 5 Social Contract
6 Principled Conscience
13
Gilligan
  • Responded to Piaget and Kohlberg
  • Almost exclusively researched males
  • Found different moral perspectives among genders
  • Male Justice orientation rights, principles,
    rules,
  • Female Care orientation concern, sensitivity,
  • Preconventional stage individual survival
  • Transition from selfishness to responsibility for
    others
  • Conventional Stage self sacrifice
  • Transition from goodness to truth
  • Postconventional - nonviolence

14
Marx
  • Motivation by economic conditions
  • Economic conditions affect other social
    structures (religion, politics, art,)
  • Wrote Communist Manifesto
  • Outlined struggle in which proletariat is
    exploited by bourgeoisie class struggle
  • Proletariat sells labour to owner, who enjoy
    surplus value
  • Proletariat large group of working class
  • Bourgeoisie small group of owners
  • Suggested revolution by working class and
    ultimately a classless society

15
Durkheim
  • Emphasis on social structure
  • Society (exterior to individual) can explain
    social behavior
  • Social stability found in common religion and
    morality
  • Loss leads to confusion (Anomie)
  • Explained suicide as result of anomie, over
    association, or under association
  • Strong social ties tend to reduce likelihood of
    suicide
  • Excessive social ties can increase the likelihood
    of suicide

16
Weber
  • Reaction to Marx
  • Motivation not by economic condition but meaning
    (religion)
  • Examined relationship between religion and
    economy
  • Found capitalism thrives under western religions
    (but not eastern) Protestant work ethic
  • Study of social structures alone cannot explain
    human behavior
  • Study of Sociology must be a mix of
    interpretation and experience
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com