Title: History of Psychology
1History of Psychology
- Chapter 7
- Functionalism Development and Founding
2I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- James did not found functional psychology
- James did influence the movement of functional
psychology
William James
3I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- A. James early life
- From wealthy family
- Educated in England, France, German, Italy,
Switzerland,and US. - Illness and family
- Travel is a way of coping with his restlessness
- Used will power to cure his depression
4I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- B. James's career
- 1 . abandoned chemistry lab work too demanding
- 2. medicine little interest
- 3. rejected biology could not tolerate the
precise collecting and physical demands of field
work - 4. interested in learning from Helmholtz and
Wundt
5I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- 5. 1875-1876 taught his first course in
psychology - a. first time experimental psychology taught in
United States - 6. 1890 Principles of psychology
- 12-year effort
- a. most influential psychology textbook ever
6I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- 7. 1890s recognized as America's leading
philosopher - 8. 1899 Talks to Teachers
- The beginning of educational psychology
- Applying psychology in classrooms
7I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- C. The Principles of Psychology
- a. goal of psychology study of living people as
they adapt to their environment - b. function of consciousness is required for
survival - c. emphasizes nonrational aspects of human nature
e.g., Emotion or passion - d. beliefs are determined by emotional factors
8I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- D. The subject matter of psychology A new look
at consciousness - 1.phenomena is the subject matter of psychology
and is to be found in immediate experience - 2. conditions the importance of the body,
especially the brain, in mental life.
9I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- 3. rebelled against artificiality and narrowness
of the Wundtians approach - 4. introspection does not show elements exist
independently of the observer (psychologists'
fallacy)
10I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- 5. consciousness is
- a. continuous flow stream of consciousness
- Consciousness is a continuous flowing process and
that any attempt to reduce it to elements will
distort it. - b. always changing, not recurrent, cumulative,
selective criterion is relevance - c. enables one to adapt to one's environment by
allowing one to choose
11I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- E. The methods of psychology
- 1 .introspection is a basic tool and is less than
perfect - 2. experimental method
- a. did not use it much
- b. but acknowledged its use as a means to
psychological knowledge, especially for
psychophysics
12I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- E. The methods of psychology
- 3 .comparative method supplements introspection
and experimentation - 4. implied functional psychology is not
restricted to a single technique
13I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- E. The methods of psychology
- 5. emphasized the value of pragmatism
- a. validity of an idea is its practical utility
- b. anything is true if it works
14 I. William James (1842-1910) Anticipator of
Functional Psychology
- F. The theory of emotions
- 1 .before James emotion precedes physical
arousal/response (fear?run) -
- 2. James physical arousal/response precedes
emotion (run?experience fear) - if no bodily change, then no emotion
15The Functional inequality of women---Mary
Calkins (1863-1930)
- A. Mary Calkins
- 1. James helps her to overcome barriers of
discriminaiton - 2. denied PhD from Harvard University awarded
honorary degree from Columbia University
16The Functional inequality of women---Mary
Calkins (1863-1930)
- 3. 1st women president of the APA
- 4. 1906 ranked 12th among the 50 most important
psychologist in the US - 5. paired associate technique
17The Functional inequality of women---Mary
Calkins (1863-1930)
- Variability hypothesis (Darwinian ideas)
- The notion that men show a wider range and
variation of physical and mental development than
women the abilities of women are seen as more
average - Women less likely to benefit from education
- Inequality between the sex
18The Functional inequality of women---Helen
Woolley (1874-1947)
- B. Helen Woolley
- 1. Born in Chicago
- 2. Parents supported the idea of education for
women - 3. 1990, received her Ph.D. under Angell and Deway
19The Functional inequality of women---Helen
Woolley (1874-1947)
- 4. 1921, the president of the National Vocational
Guidance Association - 5. 1924, director of the new Institute of Child
Welfare Research at Columbia University. - 6. Worked on the area of child development,
education, vocational education, and school
guidance counseling
20The Functional inequality of women---Helen
Woolley (1874-1947)
- 7. Her dissertation was the first experimental
test of Darwinian notion that women are
biologically inferior to men. - The results showed no sex differences in
emotional functioning and only small differences
in intellectual abilities. Women were slightly
superior to men in memory and sensory perception.
- She attributed the differences to the social and
environmental factors
21The Functional inequality of women---Leta
Hellingworth (1886-1939)
- C. Leta Hollingworth
- 1. Received her Ph.D. under Cattell at Columbia
U. - 2. Married women can not permitted to teach in
public school at that time.
22The Functional inequality of women---Leta
Hellingworth (1886-1939)
- 3. Conducted studies on variability hypothesis
- 4. The results refused the variability hypothesis
and the notion of female inferiority - 5. Challenged the idea of womans desire to have
career was abnormal or unhealthy
23The Functional inequality of women---Leta
Hellingworth (1886-1939)
- 6. Contribute to clinical, educational, and
school psychology, especially the educational and
emotional needs of gifted children. - 7. But, she was never able to obtain research
grant support.
24Functionalism at the Chicago School ---John
Dewey (1859-1952)
- A. Career
- 1. Undistinguished early life
- 2. Taught high school for few years
- 3. 1884 received his Ph.D. at John Hopkins
University -
- 4. 1886 Psychology (first American textbook in
psychology)
25Functionalism at the Chicago School ---John
Dewey (1859-1952)
- 5. established a laboratory school at U of
Chicago----cornerstone for education movement - 6. 1904 Columbia U., to work on application of
psychology to educational and philosophical
problems
26 Functionalism at the Chicago School ---John
Dewey (1859-1952)
- B. 1896 "The Reflex Arc Concept in Psychology
-
- 1 . attacked molecularism, elementism, and
reductionism of reflex arc - 2. behavior cannot be reduced to sensorimotor
elements - 3. consciousness cannot be meaningfully analyzed
into elements
27Functionalism at the Chicago School --James
Rowland Angell (1869-1949)
- A. Career
- 1. Born in an academic family
-
- 2. studied under Dewey at the University of
Michigan (undergraduate) - 3. Read James book and work with him and
received a masters degree.
28Functionalism at the Chicago School --James
Rowland Angell (1869-1949)
- 4. Studied in Germany for his Ph.D. but did not
receive his degree - 5 . no PhD but received 23 honorary degrees
- 6. Accepted a position at the U. of Chicago.
- 7. president of Yale University helped develop
the Institute of Human Relations - 8.1906 APA 15th president
29Functionalism at the Chicago School --James
Rowland Angell (1869-1949)
- B. The province of functional psychology
- 1. 1904 Psychology
- a. function of consciousness is to improve the
organism's adaptive abilities - b. goal of psychology to study how the mind
assists the adjustment of the organism to its
environment
30Functionalism at the Chicago School --James
Rowland Angell (1869-1949)
- 2. identified three themes for functional
psychology - a. the psychology of mental operations
- b. the psychology of the fundamental utilities of
consciousness - c. the psychology of psychophysical relations
(mind-body relations) - 3. gave functionalism necessary focus and stature
31Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- A. Career
- 1 . mathematics major, switched to psychology
- 2. first course in experimental psychology taught
by Angell
32Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- 3. lab assistant with J. B. Watson
- 4. introduced to animal psychology by Watson
- 5. PhD at Chicago (1905)
- 6. chair at Chicago 1919-1938 150 PhDs
33Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- B. Peaked under Carr
- 1. Maintained the functional psychology was the
American psychology - 2. nothing could be added to the functional
psychology
34Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- 3. 1925 Psychology
- a. the most refined form of functionalism
- b. the subject matter is mental
activity/processes - including memory, perception, feeling,
imagination, judgment, will
35Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- c. function of mental activity
- 1) to acquire, retain, organize, and evaluate
experiences - 2) to use these experiences to determine one's
actions - d. adaptive behavior the specific form of action
in which mental activities appear adaptive
behavior.
36Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- 4. Functionalism was the mainstream psychology
- 5. accepted data from introspection and
experiments - 6. emphasis on objectivity
- 7. Used both animal and human as subjects
37Functionalism at the Chicago School---Harvey A.
Carr (1873-1954)
- 8. Carr believed study of cultural creations
provided information about the mental activities
that produced them - 9. Chicago school bridged move from study of
subjective consciousness toward study of
objective overt behavior
38Functionalism at Columbia University---Robert
Woodworth (1869-1962)
- A. Career
- 1. heard Stanley Halls talk, read Jamess book
decided to become a psychologist - 2. 1899 PhD from Columbia with Cattell
-
- 3. taught physiology three years in hospitals
- 4. 1903-1945 taught at Columbia U. (retired a
second time in 1958)
Robert Woodworth
39Functionalism at Columbia University---Robert
Woodworth (1869-1962)
- B. Dynamic psychology
- 1. psychological knowledge
- a. begin with investigation of nature of the
stimulus and the response (external, objective
events) - b. However, miss the living organism itself
- 1) acts to determine the response
40 Functionalism at Columbia University---Robert
Woodworth (1869-1962)
- 2. Stimulus and response can be observed
objectively - 3. inside the organism can be known only through
introspection. - 4. Accepted introspection, and observational and
experimental methods are all useful tools for
psychology
41 Functionalism at Columbia University---Robert
Woodworth (1869-1962)
- 5. dynamic psychology
- a. concerned with the causal factors and
motivations in feelings and behavior. - 6. emphasized physiological events that underlie
behavior - 7. psychology's goal determine why people behave
as they do
42Criticisms of Functionalism
- A. "Functionalism" not well defined
- 1. Two definition
- an activity
- the usefulness of some activity to the organism,
e.g., function of digestion or breathing - 2. Carr the two definitions are not inconsistent
and both referred to the same process. - B. Titchener's structuralists functionalism is
not psychology
43Criticisms of Functionalism
- C. Applied aspects
- 1. Carr argued both pure and applied psychology
- a. adhere to rigorous scientific procedures
- b. valid research can be performed in
classrooms, labs, etc. - c. it is the method, not the subject matter, that
counts - 2. Later, applied psychology has become so
pervasive in American psychology
44Contributions of Functionalism
- A. shift in emphasis from structure to function
- B. research on animal behavior became an area of
study for psychology - C. inclusion of humans other than "normal adults"
as subjects - Infant, children, or people with mental
disabilities
45Contributions of Functionalism
- D. inclusion of methods beyond introspection
- Physiological research, mental tests,
questionnaire,s, and objective descriptions of
behavior - E. emphasis on the application of the methods and
findings of psychology to the solution of
practical problems.