Plato, who believed in innate ideas, suggest that the brain is the seat of mental processes • Works in include the Republic- where he suggests that Philosophers should be king because of their logical thinking • Wrote the Allegory of the Cave- this was to illustrate how much Socrates was above the rest of us in his understanding of the Mind • As a pupil of Socrates, Plato and he both thought that the mind was separable from the body and that it went on after the body dies More scientifically based- rejects that we have innate knowledge, but ironically suggested that all thought/mental processes was seated in the heart. • Took a scientific approach • Only what is observable counts • Reversed Plato/Socrates • “the soul is not separable from the body, and the same holds so for particular parts of the soul” • Knowledge is not pre-existing, instead it grows from the experiences stored in our memories Over the next 2000 years very little was put forth to add to psychological theory. The Romans did little to advance things and with their fall, the Dark Ages brought with it a slow down of any scientific approach The Catholic Church dominates the landscape during the Dark Ages and severely limits the amount on knowledge allowed to reach the public It was not really until Copernicus and later Galilei began to put out the renewed idea that the Earth was not the center of the universe that science was able to advance. Both were threatened by the Inquisition and had to have most of their works published posthumously. French philosopher/math who proposed the mindbody interaction and doctrine of innate ideas Publishes A Discourse on Method • “I think, therefore, I am” • Concluded the Socrates/Plato were correct in that the mind was “entirely distinct from the body” • How do they communicate then? • Fluid in the brain cavities contained “animal spirits” • These flow through nerves (which he thought were hollow) to the muscles • Memories opened pores in the brain that allowed these return spirits to flow • Descartes was more spiritual as well. He felt as if these instincts were what proved God’s existence. Father of Empiricism • One of the founders of modern science • “the human understanding, from its peculiar nature, easily supposes a greater degree of order and equality in things than it really finds” • “all superstition is much the same whether it be that of astrology, dreams, omens, etc….in all of which the deluded believers observe events which are fulfilled, but neglect and pass over their failure, though it be much more common” Wrote An Essay Concerning Human Understanding • Tabula Rosa-blank slate- we are born with nothing, experience is what fills in the page • There is nothing in-born it all is developed • Experience driven memories make up the human condition • These are passed down and form the framework of history/philosophy/thought Mesmer’s Hydrobath Franz Mesmer was an Austrian physician He performed cures that he called “Animal Magnetism” later called Mesmerism or Hypnosis This took place in his hydrobath and involved him passing magnets around the bath water. Eventually he got rid of the bath and magnets and said that he himself had the magnetism and would perform the process with his hands He was expelled from medicine in 1777 Franz Joseph Gall Belief that the shape of the head could explain mental facilities and personality 1834- Ernst Heinrich Weber publishes The Sense of Touch, in which he discusses the just noticeable difference (jnd) and what we now call Weber’s Law 1848 Phineas Gage suffers massive head trauma when a tamping rod left in a hole with dynamite explodes and goes through his head. It pierces his brain. However, it left his intellect and memory intact but changes his personality Gage with the rod Gage’s Skull 1859- Darwin publishes On the Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection 1861- Paul Broca, a French physician, discovers an area in the brain critical for the production of spoken language Sir Francis Galton, a cousin of Darwin, publishes Hereditary Genius 1869 • In his book, Galton claims that all intelligence is inherited • In 1876 he coined the phrase “Nature and Nurture to correspond to “heredity and environment” • Basically all his research was done by reading biographies and Autobiographies on famous people. From this he determined all his theories • He will develop the first personality tests as his lasting legacy in psychology. Although his hereditary studies go on to be embraced by such groups as the NAZI party In 1874, Carl Wernicke, finds that damage to a certain area of the left temporal lobe (similar to Broca’s earlier discovery) and now called the Wernicke Area, disrupts the ability to comprehend or produce spoken and written language. We are getting close to the joining of anatomical research with the study of behavior and mental processes that we would call modern psychology. 1878- G. Stanley Hall gets the first Ph. D in Psychology in the US 1879- Dr. Wilhelm Wundt establishes the first Psychology Lab in Leipzig, Germany 1883- Hall, who was a student of Wundt establishes the first US lab Dr. Wilhelm Wundt Wundt will go on to establish the 1st School of Psychology which is called the Structuralist School The School will be taken over quickly by Wundt’s students as he was of retirement age. EB Tichener and Hall They will study the basic structures of the brain and very elementary skills like reaction time. It relied heavily on introspection- but if a person was not verbal/intelligent they could not accurately give information. William James of Harvard publishes The Principles of Psychology It is the first text on psychology and he establishes the US psychology school of fundamentalism 1890 • James felt a alternative view was needed to Structuralism. To him it was like trying to understand a car by looking at its disassembled parts • The nose smells and the brain thinks, but how do these two function together to provide the process of living. • Focus on moment to moment streams of consciousness and exploration of emotions, memories, will power and habits • Known for his outspoken views on women in the field and his writings James championed Mary Calkins joining his classes at Harvard. Even though she outperformed the male students and passes the Doctoral level exams, Harvard denied her a diploma. She will become the first female president of the APA • Because Calkins rejected her diploma from Radcliffe, Mary Floy Washburn is the first female to get Psychology degree from Cornell in 1894. • It will take time for females to become respected in the field. The “Big Daddy” Sigmund Freud • Perhaps the most famous psychologist of all time. • Austrian born, will begin the school of Psychoanalysis. • An innovator of ideas for the study Basic principles of Psychoanalysis • Introspection • Consciousness (Id, Ego, Superego) • Freudian Slip • Word Association • Dream Analysis • Stage Theorist (shaping during childhood) • Anxiety • Defense Mechanisms • Oedipal/Electra Complex • Most work revolves around the idea of sex being the master motivator for human behavior • 1900 published his work The Interpretation of Dreams, this will be his major work dealing with Psychoanalysis Neo-Freudians Trained by Freud but disagreed with him over various tenants of his theories Two major points of disagreement 1) They placed more emphasis on the conscious mind’ role in interpreting experience and in coping with environment 2) They doubted that sex and aggression were all-consuming motivations. Loftier motivations and social interaction more so. Alfred Adler Inferiority Complex We struggle more to overcome feelings of inferiority in childhood and that drives us more than sexual tension or aggression in our personality formation Much of our behavior stems from childhood desire to achieve superiority and power Emphasis on where (in what order) birth occurs as well. Middle Child Syndrome Karen Horney (Horn-eye) get you minds out of the gutters Childhood anxiety plays powerful role. Feelings of helplessness make us search for love and acceptance. Countered Freud’s theory that women had “weaker” superegos and suffered from “penis envy” Erik Erikson No he doesn’t have the same parents as Charlie Charles Like Adler and Horney he felt that social experience played a more important part. Develops his Psychosocial Stages of Development which is more of a sliding scale than Freud’s Psychosexual Stages Carl Jung Agreed with Freud that the unconscious is the most powerful pull. But went beyond to say that the unconscious held more than just the repressed thoughts and feelings. He thought humans had a “Collective Unconscious”- a common reservoir of images derived from our species’ universal experiences called Archetypes. 1905 Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon produce the first Intelligence Tests (IQ) Ivan Pavlov 1905 The beginnings of Conditioning Pavlov with one of his famous dogs. He will experiment with dogs to work on his idea of all behavior being learned. This will form the basis for the School of Behaviorism Behaviorists • Discount the idea of mental constructs/consciousness. Not that they don’t exist but that they don’t count (like looking at the car’s speedometer-it doesn’t make the car go, it reflects what’s happening) • Only measurable, observable is what matters • Research and data driven • Most famous early proponent John B Watson Watson and his lab assistant/main squeeze Rosalie Rayner Together they worked on one of the most famous Behaviorist experiments- “Little Albert”. In this experiment run amok, they conditioned a child to be afraid of white rats. However, they inadvertently discovered that generalization would take place when Albert also showed fear of related objects and animals What do you think about this quote, write a response fully explaining your answer. Practically all the psychologist trained the United States during the first half of the 1900’s were Behaviorists. It is still major school today although there are now competing schools and the idea of consciousness has re-entered psychology’s lexicon. Still, Watson begat Stanley Milgram, Philip Zimbardo and the man considered to be the greatest modern psychologist BF Skinner. They each carried on the tradition of Behaviorism. Milgram’s electroshock experiments after WWII were groundbreaking. He would have subjects administer shocks to “volunteers” who got wrong answers on tests, based on authority figures telling them to do it in increasing magnitudes. Controversial considering that the Holocaust had just happened Zimbardo was famous for his Stanford Prison Experiment and later writings on Why Good People do Bad Things and the Lucifer Effect https://youtu.be/sZwfNs1pqG0 B F Skinner Voted the most influencial psychologist of modern times 1938 publishes The Behavior of Organisms, which describes the Operant Conditioning of animals Up to this time, all behaviorists operated on the theory of Classical Conditioning, Skinner will change this Operant Conditioning takes place by learning from the consequence of behavior. A dog is wandering around the neighborhood, sniffing, looking, checking- typical dog behavior. He goes by an neighbor’s house and your neighbor throws out a soup bone to him. The next day, the dog is likely to come back during his rounds if not go directly to it. When this happens, your neighbor produces another bone and your dog becomes an daily visitor. How does this differ from Classical Conditioning? Skinner Box 1948 Skinner comes out with a novel Walden Two that describes a Utopian Society based on positive reinforcement. This becomes a clarion call for applying psychological principles to everyday living and advocates a communal lifestyle. The idea of positive and negative reinforcement becomes a dominant theme in psychology 1920 Francis Cecil Sumner 1st African-American to get Doctorate in Psychology from Clark University Watson and Rayner perform their “Little Albert” experiment Hermann Rorschach develops his ink blot test, designed after Freud’s word association 1923 Jean Piaget publishes The Language and Thought of the Child Piaget had become interested in the development of human thought by watching his three daughters playing in a park in Paris. This will lead to a lifetime of research that today is referred to the Cognitive/Developmental School of thought Noam Chomsky and Leon Festinger will be major proponents. 1927 Introduction to the Technique of Child Analysis by Anna Freud Begins taking a look at using psychoanalysis in helping children Anna and Sigmund Her father approved but didn’t really help with her research Wolfgang Kohler 1929 Gestalt Psychology Criticizes Behaviorist psychology and outlines essential Gestalt principles Gestalt School Perception is the biggest influence in behavior Gestalt Principles of Perception simplicity, closure, proximity, similarity, continuity Simplicity Closure Proximity Similarity Continuity 1936- Egas Moniz publishes his results on the first frontal lobotomies. He will become the inspiration for Dr. Walter Freedman, who will introduce the procedure to the United States. (look forward to The Lobotomist when we get to our study of the brain in a later section) 1938 Cerletti and Bini use electroshock therapy on a human for the first time. 1939- David Wechsler publishes the WechslerBellevue intelligence test. This is a forerunner for the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) and later the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) 1943- Starke Hathaway and J. Charnley McKinley publish the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) 1946- Dr. Benjamin Spock publishes The Commonsense Book of Baby and Child Care Alfred Kinsey and his colleagues publish Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Groundbreaking for its straightforward treatment of a taboo subject like sexuality Opens door for other researchers of human sexuality like Masters and Johnson and Dr. Ruth Westheimer. 1948- Earnest Hilgard publishes Theories of Learning- it becomes the text for all educators 1949- Raymond Cattell publishes the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF)- the standard for hiring practices. 1952- The APA publishes the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). This will become the official guide for all psychologist to go to when looking at diagnosing mental disorders. 1953- Janet Taylor’s Manifest Anxiety Scale appears in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology 1954- Abraham Maslow proposes his hierarchy of needs in Motivation and Personality 1969- Albert Bandura publishes Principles of Behavior Modification 1971 – his Social Learning Theory Many more in the 80’s and 90’s- time will tell their contributions Later Schools Humanist, Biological and Sociocultural Abraham Maslow Carl Rogers Rollo May Humanist Psychology developed as a reaction to behaviorism. It described human psychology as evolving and self-directed. It differs from Behaviorism and Psychoanalysis in that it does not view humans as being controlled by event in the environment or by unconscious factors. Instead, the environment and other outside forces simply serve as background to our own internal growth. Each person is unique and potential to fully develop. This is basically the approach taken by modern educators and is the emphasis used in movements like No Child Left Behind and the Kentucky Education Reform Act. What do you think about the fully immersive, everyone can achieve at a high level mentality of today’s educational movements? Write a paragraph response. Biological Too new to have any major proponents to picture Basically a modern rehash of the Structural School. Now they have the technological means to go beyond what Wundt and Tichener had to work with. The use of CAT scans, MRI, EEGs and EKGs are common in this approach. Socioeconomic School Leonard W. Doob Newest approachStudies the relationship/influence of cultural and ethnic similarities and differences on behavioral and social functioning Environment means much more Today’s perspectives: Biological, Evolutionary, Cognitive, Humanistic, Psychoanalytic, Learning, Sociocultural, Behavioral Biological-biological processes influence behavior and mental processes Evolutionary-adaptive organisms survive and transmit their genes to future generations Cognitive-perceptions and thoughts influence behavior Humanistic-people make free and conscious choices bases on their unique experiences Psychanalytic- Unconscious motives influence their behavior Learning- personal experience and reinforcement guide individual development Sociocultural- sociocultural, biological, and psychological factors create individual differences Most Psychologists blend all of the above into their practices today. There is not really AN accepted view. However this does not mean that people do not specialize in one or another area.