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A Short History of Psychology. Origins of Psychology. Phrenology Greeks- 5 th & 6 th centuries B.C. People’s lives were dominated not so much by gods but their own minds People are rational Aristotle = Asked Why?
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Origins of Psychology • Phrenology • Greeks- 5th & 6th centuries B.C. • People’s lives were dominated not so much by gods but their own minds • People are rational • Aristotle = Asked Why? • Began to compare the sensations, wonder how the thought process worked, and even why we slept
Origins Continued… • During Renaissance people began to experiment and observe results • Rene Descartes first to pose dualism-idea that a link existed between the mind and body • Nativism- is the view that certain skills or abilities are 'native' or hard wired into the brain at birth. (1596-1650)
John Locke (1632-1704) • An Essay Concerning Human Understanding • Tabula rasa • Empiricism • Knowledge originates in experience and that science should rely on observation and experimentation
Psychological Science Is Born • Wilhelm Wundt • (1832-1920) • Established modern psychology as a formal field of study • 1st “Psychologist” • Developed the first psychology lab/experiment • Measuring reaction time
E.B. Titchner- brought Wundt’s psychology to U.S. • Structuralism-study the basic elements that make up human mental experiences • Introspection • Looking inward- analyzing immediate sensations and how they related to one another. • Results varied and were unreliable • For example…
Using structuralism and the idea of introspection I would need to analyze everyone’s immediate sensations. • Did this picture make you smile? • Did this picture make you want to cry? • Once again with structuralism, results varied and were unreliable
Functionalism • Functionalism- study how animals and people adapt to their environments.. • Influenced by Charles Darwin • William James- father of psychology in U.S. • Taught first psychology class at Harvard University in 1875. • Why does the brain think? Why does the nose smell? • Wrote “The Principles of Psychology” • Took 12 years! 1842-1910
Ladies • Margaret Washburn • First PhD 1894, Cornell • The Animal Mind- animal behavior research • Mary Calkins • Denied degree by Harvard in 1895 • First woman president of the APA • Renowned memory researcher Between 1996-2009 Females claimed two-thirds of U.S. Psychology Ph.D.s
Contemporary Approaches • Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic- Unconscious motives and conflicts determines human behavior, feelings, and thoughts • Sigmund Freud (1856- 1939) • Dream Analysis • Emotional responses to childhood experiences • Pretty much linked everything to sex! • Free Association- say anything that comes to mind. • LETS PRACTICE FREE ASSOCIATION
Behaviorism • Learn/modify behavior based on response to environment • Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936) & Classical Conditioning • (The Dog Dude)
John Watson (1878-1958) • Behaviorism • Psychology as the science of behavior! • Little Albert Experiment • Classical Conditioning • Watson later had a successful career in…
Behaviorism Continued… • Defined psychology as “the scientific study of observable behavior.” • Can record a person’s behavior as a response to different situations. • Skinner Thorndike Operant Conditioning 1904-1990 1874-1949
Cognitive • How people process, store, retrieve, use info and how thought processes influence our behavior. Behavior is more than a simple response to a stimulus. Behavior is influenced by a variety of mental processes. Processes include perceptions, memories, and expectations. Jean Piaget- Observed Children 1896-1980
Humanistic • Each person has freedom in directing his or her future and achieving personal growth. • Importance of current environmental influences on our growth potential and the importance of having our needs for love and acceptance satisfied. 1902-1987
Psychology Defined 2012 • The definition has evolved over time. *The science of behavior and mental *processes. • Behavior = any action we can observe and record. • Examples: Yelling, smiling, sweating… • Mental Processes = internal, subjective experiences we infer from behavior. • Examples: Sensations, perceptions, feelings…
Nature versus Nurture • The longstanding controversy over the relative contributions that genes and experience make to the development of psychological traits and behaviors. Plato Descartes Darwin Aristotle Locke
Nature versus Nurture • How are humans alike but diverse? • Are gender differences biologically predisposed or socially constructed? • Is children’s grammar mostly innate or formed by experience? • How are differences in intelligence and personality influenced by heredity and by environment? • Are sexual behaviors more pushed by inner biology or pulled by external incentives?