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Title: Chapter 4: The Nineteenth-Century Transformation of Psychology


1
Chapter 4 The Nineteenth-Century Transformation
of Psychology
  • A History of Psychology
  • (3rd Edition)
  • John G. Benjafield

2
Psychology in the Nineteenth Century
  • Beginning of nineteenth century
  • Many believed psychology could never be a science
  • End of nineteenth century
  • Possibility that psychology could be a scientific
    discipline seemed more plausible

3
J.F. Herbart (17761841)
  • Attempted to cast a psychological theory in
    purely mathematical terms
  • Interested both in what was above and below the
    threshold of consciousness
  • Below the threshold of consciousness
    unconscious events that could become conscious

4
J.F. Herbart
  • Assumption that all mental life is the result of
    the action and interaction of elementary ideas
  • Elementary ideas entirely simple concepts or
    sensations
  • Ex. red, sour

5
J.F. Herbart
  • Some ideas facilitate each other, while other
    ideas inhibit each other
  • Process of inhibition can be put into
    mathematical terms
  • No matter how much B is inhibited by A, it will
    never be less than zero

6
J.F. Herbart
  • Apperceptive mass the set of ideas that
    assimilates ideas consistent with it and rejects
    ideas inconsistent with it
  • All concepts strive against suppression
  • This striving for expression in consciousness is
    the source of the emotions
  • Herbarts psychology is dynamic

7
Herbart and Educational Psychology
  • Goal of education instill the values of the
    established order
  • Steps for instruction
  • 1. Preparation
  • 2. Presentation
  • 3. Association
  • 4. Generalization
  • Fifth step added later Application

8
Herbarts Contributions to Psychology
  1. Notion that ideas can move back and forth across
    a threshold of consciousness
  2. Attempt to apply mathematics to psychology
  3. Attempt to apply psychological ideas to education

9
G.T. Fechner (18011887)
  • Studied medicine at Leipzig, Germany
  • Moved to literary field
  • Studied physics
  • Became professor of physics at University of
    Leipzig
  • Responsible for creating an approach to
    psychology that was seen as truly scientific

10
Psychophysical Parallelism
  • Panpsychism the notion that the mind permeates
    everything in the universe
  • Intimate relationship between mental and physical
  • Relationship is one of psychophysical
    parallelism a strict parallelism between body
    and soul such that from one, properly understood,
    the other can be constructed

11
Psychophysics
  • Inner psychophysics the study of the
    relationship between mind and brain
  • Outer psychophysics the study of the connection
    between stimulus magnitudes and the intensity of
    the resulting sensations

12
Webers Law
  • Webers Law the relation between a stimulus
    magnitude and the amount by which that magnitude
    must be changed in order for the subject to
    perceive a Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
  • Requires that we regard our basic experiences, or
    sensations, as quantifiable
  • Quantity objection a refusal to accept this
    assumption of psychophyics

13
Fechners Psychophysical Methods
  1. Method of just noticeable differences
  2. Method of right and wrong cases
  3. Method of average error

14
Experimental Aesthetics
  • Experimental aesthetics psychology of beauty
  • Aesthetics from above evaluate art according to
    standards derived from some theory of what art
    should be
  • Aesthetics from below depends on obeservations
    of spectators responses to art in order to try
    to understand the effects that art has on people
  • Empirical

15
Hermann von Helmholtz (18211884)
  • One of the greatest scientists of the 19th
    century
  • Career marked by his ability to bring the fields
    of physiology, physics, and mathematics to bear
    on any one subject
  • Influenced by Johannes Müller
  • Advanced a theory of specific energy of nerves

16
Hermann von Helmholtz
  • All nerves operate in the same way and transmit
    impulses at the same speed
  • Different experiences arise when nerves connect
    different sense organs to different places in the
    brain

17
Helmholtz on Perception
  • Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Perception the
    degree to which each cone in the eye is
    stimulated determines the colour we see
  • Red, green, and blue receptors
  • Also Trichromatic Theory of Colour Perception
  • Place theory nerves located at different places
    in the cochlea are responsible for the perception
    of different pitches

18
Unconscious Inference
  • Unconscious inference we infer, on the basis of
    previous experience, that particular objects in
    the world have given rise to the images on our
    retinas.
  • The result of this process is the
    three-dimensional world we experience

19
Ewald Hering (18341918)
  • Formulated a competing theory to Helmholtzs
    theory of colour perception
  • Opponent process theory of colour vision
  • The visual system is based on three pairs of
    antagonistic processes
  • Light acts on each pair to yield one of its
    component colours but inhibit the other
  • The pairs are yellow-blue, red-green, and
    white-black

20
Christine Ladd-Franklin (18471930)
  • Trained for a PhD in logic and mathematics at
    Johns Hopkins University
  • Not awarded the degree because she was a woman
  • Unable to hold a regular university position for
    most of her career because she was married

21
Ladd-Franklins Theory of Colour Perception
  • Evolutionary-based theory
  • Stage 1 vision sensitive only to achromatic
    colours ranging from white to black
  • Rods represent the earliest stage of the
    development of vision
  • Stage 2 emergence of cones sensitive to yellow
    and blue
  • Stage 3 some of the cones sensitive to yellow
    undergo a further specialization to become cones
    sensitive to red and green
  • Evidence for her theory comes from the study of
    colour blindess
  • Studied people unable to see red and green but
    able to see yellow and blue
  • Law of progressions and pathologies the last
    system to evolve is the first to show effects of
    degeneration

22
The Localization of Function
  • Localization of function controversy controversy
    over the attempts to locate particular
    psychological functions in the cortex of the
    brain
  • Phrenology
  • Study of brain injuries

23
Phrenology
  • Franz Joseph Gall (17581828) and J.G. Spurzheim
    (17761832)
  • Believed the more highly developed a function,
    the larger it would be
  • The larger a function, the more it would protrude
    from the skull
  • Thus, one could divine a persons strengths and
    weaknesses by examining the shape of skull
  • Phrenological chart chart of the skull
    representing the locations of various
    psychological functions

24
The Study of Brain Injuries
  • Paul Broca (18241880)
  • Investigated the loss of the ability to express
    ideas by means of speech (Brocas aphasia)
  • Autopsy of patient showed severe damage to a part
    of the left hemisphere (Brocas area)
  • Karl Wenicke (18481905)
  • Studied 10 cases of patients who could speak but
    could not understand what was said to them
    (Wernickes aphasia)
  • Found lesions in the left hemisphere (Wenickes
    area)

25
Study of Brain Injuries
  • Studies of the relationship between the loss of
    psychological function and brain damage
  • Can be a very suggestive source of evidence
  • Are seldom definitive or complete

26
Francis Galton (18221911)
  • Born in England
  • Cousin of Charles Darwin
  • One of the most versatile and prolific scholars
    in the history of psychology
  • Many of his opinions are still controversial

27
Hereditary Genius
  • Galton developed the hypothesis that ability and
    genius are hereditary
  • Galtons Law the two parents contribute one-half
    of the total heritage of the offspring, the four
    grandparents one-quarter, etc.

28
Eugenics
  • To Galton, the implication of his studies was
    that society should encourage selective breeding
    of humans
  • Eugenics
  • Eugenic movement became influential in the early
    twentieth century

29
Galton and Statistics
  • Normal distribution a symmetrical distribution,
    with an equal number of events on the left as on
    the right
  • Regression towards the mean occurs as a
    mathematical necessity whenever two variables are
    not perfectly correlated

30
Galton and Memory
  • Examined his own memory in great detail
  • Employed techniques that have developed into
    widely used experimental procedures
  • Autobiographical memories memories of events in
    ones life

31
Herbert Spencer (18201903)
  • 1852 coined the phrase survival of the fittest
  • Evolutionary theory applied to the inorganic,
    organic, and super-organic (ie. societies)
  • Law of evolution evolution is a process by which
    a system moves from an indefinite, incoherent
    homogeneity, to a definite coherent heterogeneity

32
Social Darwinism
  • Social Darwinism individuals should be left to
    their own devices
  • (Ex. the state should not interfere with the
    evolutionary process)
  • Some successful American business people took up
    social Darwinism
  • Ex. John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie
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