Title: The History of Motivation and Emotion
1The History of Motivation and Emotion
2I. Brief History of Motivation
- A. Aristotles Theory
- Causes of behavior efficient (trigger), final
(purpose), formal (theory), and material (brain) - B. Hedonism
- Pursue pleasure and avoid pain
- 1. Ancient Sources
- Socrates, Democritus, and Epicurus pleasure is
to exceed pain in the long run.
3I. Brief History of Motivation
- 2. Later philosophers
- Hobbes on incentive motivation approach
pleasing, avoid displeasings timuli. - Locke on choice small immediate versus large
delayed reward. - Bentham on principle of utility
increase/decrease in pleasure determines
behavior.
4I. Brief History of Motivation
- 3. Sigmund Freud
- Pleasure principle pursue pleasure by sudden
decrease in tension - Reality principle circumstances determine when
to attain pleasure. - 4. Edward Lee Thorndike
- Law of effect satisfying consequences strengthen
behavior dissatisfying consequences weaken
behavior.
5I. Brief History of Motivation
- 5. Law of Effect Today
- Consequences refer to observables rather than to
subjective states. - 6. Current Trends
- Self control choose delayed rewards.
- Impulsiveness choose immediate reward.
6C. Evolution and Motivation
- 1. Charles Darwin
- Theory of evolution is based on variation and
selection. - Principle of variation values of a particular
trait vary in frequency. - Principle of selection environment selects
values that aid survival. - 2. Herbert Spencer
- Pleasure selects for behaviors that aid survival.
- Pain selects against behaviors that are
detrimental to survival. - 3. Instincts
- Inherited impulses that produce specific pattern
of behavior. - 4. Current Trends
- Smiles and laughs from play help child master
social environment.
7D. Unconscious Motivation
- 1. Freuds Conscious-Unconscious Distinction
- Preconscious small room containing thought,
feelings, sensations. - Unconscious large room containing repressed
impulses, instincts. - Repression censor prevents impulses from
entering small room. - Consciousness impulses attract eye of
consciousness in small room. - 2. Motivational Instincts and the Unconscious
- Instincts originate in the body and exert
pressure with the aim of being satisfied through
interaction with an object. - Three main Freudian instincts sex, death, and
ego preservation. - 3. Satisfying Unconscious Impulses
- Through jokes and through manifest and latent
dream content.
8D. Unconscious Motivation
- 4. Current Trends
- Automatic processes behaviors carried out with
little awareness.
9E. Internal Sources of Motivation
- 1. Drive concept
- Mechanism Woodworth's idea of how we do
something. - Drive stimulus that induced behavior and keeps
it going. - 2. Psychological Needs
- Inherent characteristic that indicates a
psychological deficit. - Primary or viscerogenic Murray's physiological
needs. - Secondary or psychogenic Murray's 22
psychological needs. - 3. Current Trends
- More needs postulated, which may be
hierarchically arranged.
10F. Commonality among Instincts, Drives, and Needs
- All refer to internal sources of motivation that
demand satisfaction.
11G. Environmental Sources of Motivation
- Incentives stimuli that attract or repel an
individual. - Tolman Honzik experiment reward decreases,
nonreward increases maze errors.
12H. Environmental and Internal Sources Induce
Behavior
- Motivation depends on internal and external
sources - 1. Wardens Incentive-Drive Link
- Incentive (water) links with drive (thirst) to
motivate behavior. - Increased drive increases electrified grid
crossings. - Delayed incentive decreases electrified grid
crossings. - 2. Lewins Field Theory
- Psychological force motivation depends on
valence of objects in life space, psychological
tension, and psychological distance.
13II. Brief History of Emotion
- Historically, description of emotion shifted from
outward to inward movement. - A. Emotion as Subjective Feeling
- Personal feelings of affect that arise in
consciousness - B. Basic Emotions
- Early Greeks to Descartes to James considered
basic emotions. - Cognitive interpretations of stimulus changes
determine emotions. - C. Emotion as Impulses for Action and Thought
- Action readiness impulse to action of
emotion-relevant behavior. - Motor explosion nonadaptive response, e.g., jump
for joy. - D. Physiological Arousal
- It serves as the basis for feelings and action
readiness for emotions. - E. Facial Expression
- As indicator of emotional feelings.
- As signals used to satisfy social motives.
- Facial feedback hypothesis pattern of facial
muscles is informational - basis for emotional feelings.