Title: A Brief History of Western Psychology
1A Brief History of Western Psychology
2Ebers Papyrus of about 1550 BC
- The Ebers papyrus is written in hieratic script
and preserves for us the most voluminous record
of ancient Egyptian medicine known. The 110-page
scroll contains some 700 magical formulas and
remedies. Although it contains many incantations
meant to turn away disease-causing demons and
other superstition, there is also evidence of a
long tradition of empirical practice and
observation. - The papyrus contains a "treatise on the heart."
It notes that the heart is the center of the
blood supply, with vessels attached for every
member of the body. The Egyptians seem to have
known little about the kidneys and made the heart
the meeting point of a number of vessels which
carried all the fluids of the body blood,
tears, urine and sperm. - Mental disorders are detailed in a chapter of the
papyrus called the Book of Hearts. Disorders such
as depression and dementia are covered. The
descriptions of these disorders suggest that
Egyptians conceived of mental and physical
diseases in much the same way.
3Phrenology
- Phrenology (from Greek f???, phren, "mind" and
?????, logos, "knowledge") is a theory which
claims to be able to determine character,
personality traits, and criminality on the basis
of the shape of the head (reading "bumps").
Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall
around 1800, and very popular in the 19th
century, it is now discredited as a
pseudoscience. Phrenology has however received
credit as a protoscience for having contributed
to medical science the ideas that the brain is
the organ of the mind and that certain brain
areas have localized, specific functions. - Its principles were that the brain is the organ
of the mind, and that mind has a set of different
mental faculties, each particular faculty being
represented in a different part or organ of the
brain. These areas were said to be proportional
to a given individual's propensities and
importance of a mental faculty, and the overlying
skull bone to reflect these differences.
4The 19th century
- Physiology, including neurophysiology,
professionalized and saw some of its most
significant discoveries. Among its leaders were
Charles Bell (1774-1843) and François Magendie
(1783-1855) who independently discovered the
distinction between sensory and motor nerves in
the spinal column, Johannes Müller (1801-1855)
who proposed the doctrine of specific nerve
energies, Emil du Bois-Reymond (1818-1896) who
studied the electrical basis of muscle
contraction, Pierre Paul Broca (1824-1880) and
Carl Wernicke (1848-1905) who identified areas of
the brain responsible for different aspects of
language, as well as Gustav Frisch (1837-1927),
Eduard Hitzig (1839-1907), and David Ferrier
(1843-1924) who localized sensory and motor areas
of the brain. One of the principal founders of
experimental physiology, Hermann von Helmholtz
(1821-1894), conducted studies of a wide range of
topics that would later be of interest to
psychologists -- the speed of neural
transmission, the natures of sound and color, and
of our perceptions of them, etc. In the 1860s,
while he held a position in Heidelberg, Helmholtz
engaged as an assistant a young M.D. named
Wilhelm Wundt. Wundt employed the equipment of
the physiology laboratory -- chronoscope,
kymograph, and various peripheral devices -- to
address more complicated psychological questions
than had heretofore been considered
experimentally. In particular he was interested
in the nature of apperception -- the point at
which a perception comes into the central focus
of conscious awareness.
5- Drawing of the cells of the chick cerebellum by
Santiago Ramón y Cajal, from "Estructura de los
centros nerviosos de las aves", Madrid, 1905
6Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
- Structuralism
- Introspection
- Establishment of the first psychology lab
- Wundt perceived the subject as the study of
human consciousness and sought to apply
experimental methods to studying internal mental
processes. While his use of a process known as
introspection is seen as unreliable and
unscientific today, his early work in psychology
helped set the stage for future experimental
methods. An estimated 17,000 students attended
Wundts psychology lectures, and hundreds more
pursued degrees in psychology and studied in his
psychology lab. While his influence dwindled in
the years to come, his impact on psychology is
unquestionable.
7Structuralism Becomes Psychologys First School
of Thought Edward B. Titchener, one of Wundts
most famous students, would go on to found
psychologys first major school of thought.
According to the structuralists, human
consciousness could be broken down into much
smaller parts. Using a process known as
introspection, trained subjects would attempt to
break down their responses and reactions to the
most basic sensation and perceptions. While
structuralism is notable for its emphasis on
scientific research, its methods were unreliable,
limiting, and subjective. When Titchener died in
1927, structuralism essentially died with him.
8Structuralism vs. Functionalism
- Structuralism was the first school of psychology,
and focused on breaking down mental processes
into the most basic components. - Functionalism formed as a reaction to the
theories of the structuralist school of thought
and was heavily influenced by the work of William
James. Major functionalist thinkers included John
Dewey and Harvey Carr.
9The Functionalism of William James
- Psychology flourished in American during the mid-
to late-1800s. William James emerged as one of
the major American psychologists during this
period and the publication of his classic
textbook, The Principles of Psychology,
established him as the father of American
psychology. His book soon became the standard
text in psychology and his ideas eventually
served as the basis for a new school of thought
known as functionalism. The focus of
functionalism was on how behavior actually works
to help people live in their environment.
Functionalists utilized methods such as direct
observation. While both of these early schools of
thought emphasized human consciousness, their
conceptions of it were significantly different.
While the structuralists sought to break down
mental processes into their smallest parts, the
functionalists believed that consciousness
existed as a more continuous and changing
process. While functionalism is no longer a
separate school of thought, it would go on to
influence later psychologists and theories of
human thought and behavior.
10The Psychology of Sigmund Freud
- Up to this point, early psychology stressed
conscious human experience. An Austrian physician
named Sigmund Freud changed the face of
psychology in a dramatic way, proposing a theory
of personality that emphasized the importance of
the unconscious mind. Freuds clinical work with
patients suffering from hysteria and other
ailments led him to believe that early childhood
experiences and unconscious impulses contributed
to the development of adult personality and
behavior.
11Psychoanalysis
- Sigmund Freud was the founder of the
psychodynamic approach. This school of thought
emphasizes the influence of the unconscious mind
on behavior. Freud believed that the human mind
was composed of three elements the id, the ego,
and the superego. Other major psychodynamic
thinkers include Anna Freud, Carl Jung, and Erik
Erikson.
12Freuds Contributions to Psychology
- Regardless of the perception of Sigmund Freuds
theories, there is no question that he had an
enormous impact on the field of psychology. His
work supported the belief that not all mental
illnesses have physiological causes and he also
offered evidence that cultural differences have
an impact on psychology and behavior. His work
and writings contributed to our understanding of
personality, clinical psychology, human
development, and abnormal psychology.
13Behaviorism
- The Psychology of Pavlov, Watson, and Skinner
- Psychology changed dramatically during the early
20th-century as another school of thought known
as behaviorism rose to dominance. Behaviorism was
a major change from previous theoretical
perspectives, rejecting the emphasis on both the
conscious and unconscious mind. Instead,
behaviorism strove to make psychology a more
scientific discipline by focusing purely on
observable behavior.
14Ivan Pavlov
- Behaviorism had its earliest start with the
work of a Russian physiologist named Ivan Pavlov.
Pavlovs research on the digestive systems of
dogs led to his discovery of the classical
conditioning process, which demonstrated that
behaviors could be learned via conditioned
associations.
15Behaviorism
- Behaviorism became the dominant school of thought
during the 1950s. Based upon the work of thinkers
such as John Watson, Ivan Pavlov, and B. F.
Skinner, behaviorism holds that all behavior can
be explained by environmental causes, rather than
by internal forces. Behaviorism is focused on
observable behavior. Theories of learning
including classical conditioning and operant
conditioning were the focus of a great deal of
research.
16- An American psychologist named John B. Watson
soon became one of the strongest advocates of
behaviorism. Initially outlining the basics
principles of this new school of thought in his
1913 paper Psychology as the Behaviorist Views
It, Watson later went on to offer a definition in
his classic book Behaviorism (1924), writing - Behaviorismholds that the subject matter of
human psychology is the behavior of the human
being. Behaviorism claims that consciousness is
neither a definite nor a usable concept. The
behaviorist, who has been trained always as an
experimentalist, holds, further, that belief in
the existence of consciousness goes back to the
ancient days of superstition and magic.
17B. F. Skinner
- The impact of behaviorism was enormous, and this
school of thought continued to dominate for the
next 50 years. Psychologist B.F. Skinner
furthered the behaviorist perspective with his
concept of operant conditioning, which
demonstrated the effect of punishment and
reinforcement on behavior. While behaviorism
eventually lost its hold on psychology, the basic
principles of behavioral psychology are still
widely in use today. Therapeutic techniques such
as behavioral modification and token economies
are often utilized to help children learn new
skills and overcome maladaptive behaviors, while
conditioning is used in many situations ranging
from parenting to education.
18Dissenting schools
- Not all psychologists, however, have been happy
with what they perceive as mechanical models of
the mind and human nature. - Carl Jung, a one-time follower and contemporary
of Freud, was instrumental in introducing notions
of spirituality into Freudian psychoanalysis
(Freud had rejected religion as a mass delusion). - Alfred Adler, after a brief association with
Freud's discussion circle, left to form his own
discipline, called Individual (indivisible)
Psychology. His influence on contemporary
psychology has been considerable, with many
approaches borrowing fragments of his theory. A
recent rebirth of his legacy, Classical Adlerian
Psychology, combines Adler's original theory of
personality, style of psychotherapy, and
philosophy of living, with Abraham Maslow's
vision of optimal functioning. - Humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s and
has continued as a reaction to positivist and
scientific approaches to the mind. It stresses a
phenomenological view of human experience and
seeks to understand human beings and their
behavior by conducting qualitative research. The
humanistic approach has its roots in
existentialist and phenomenological philosophy
and many humanist psychologists completely reject
a scientific approach, arguing that trying to
turn human experience into measurements strips it
of all meaning and relevance to lived existence. - Some of the founding theorists behind this school
of thought are Abraham Maslow, who formulated a
hierarchy of human needs Carl Rogers, who
created and developed client centred therapy and
Fritz Perls, who helped create and develop
Gestalt therapy. - A further development of Humanistic psychology
emerging in the 1970s was Transpersonal
psychology, which studies the spiritual dimension
of humanity, looking at the possibilities for
development beyond the normal ego-boundaries.
19Humanism
- The Third Force in Psychology
- While the first half of the twentieth-century was
dominated by psychoanalysis and behaviorism, a
new school of thought known as humanistic
psychology emerged during the second half of the
century. Often referred to as the third force
in psychology, this theoretical perspective
emphasized conscious experiences. American
psychologist Carl Rogers is often considered the
founding father of this school of thought. While
psychoanalysts looked at unconscious impulses and
behaviorists focused purely on environmental
causes, Rogers believed strongly in the power of
free will and self-determination. Psychologist
Abraham Maslow also contributed to humanistic
psychology with his famous hierarchy of needs
theory of human motivation.
20Humanistic Psychology
- Humanistic psychology developed as a response to
psychoanalysis and behaviorism. Humanistic
psychology instead focused on individual free
will, personal growth, and self-actualization.
Major humanist thinkers included Abraham
Maslow and Carl Rogers.
21Gestalt Psychology
- Gestalt psychology is based upon the idea
that we experience things as unified wholes. This
approach to psychology began in Germany and
Austria during the late 19th century in response
to the molecular approach of structuralism.
Rather that breaking down thoughts and behavior
to their smallest element, the gestalt
psychologists believed that you must look at the
whole of experience. According to the gestalt
thinkers, the whole is greater than the sum of
its parts.
22Cognitive Psychology
- Cognitive psychology is the branch of psychology
that studies mental processes including how
people think, perceive, remember, and learn. As
part of the larger field of cognitive science,
this branch of psychology is related to other
disciplines including neuroscience, philosophy,
and linguistics. One of the most influential
theories from this school of thought was the
stages of cognitive development theory proposed
by Jean Piaget.
23Cognitivism
- Noam Chomsky's review of Skinner's book Verbal
Behavior (that aimed to explain language
acquisition in a behaviorist framework) is
considered one of the major theoretical
challenges to the type of radical behaviorism
that Skinner taught. Chomsky showed that language
could not be learned solely from the sort of
operant conditioning that Skinner postulated.
Chomsky's argument was that as people could
produce an infinite variety of sentences unique
in structure and meaning, and that these could
not possibly be generated solely through
experience of natural language. As an
alternative, he concluded that there must be
internal mental structures - states of mind of
the sort that behaviorism rejected as illusory.
Similarly, work by Albert Bandura showed that
children could learn by social observation,
without any change in overt behaviour, and so
must be accounted for by internal
representations. - The rise of computer technology also promoted the
metaphor of mental function as information
processing. This, combined with a scientific
approach to studying the mind, as well as a
belief in internal mental states, led to the rise
of cognitivism as the dominant model of the mind. - Links between brain and nervous system function
were also becoming common, partly due to the
experimental work of people like Charles
Sherrington and Donald Hebb, and partly due to
studies of people with brain injury (see
cognitive neuropsychology). With the development
of technologies for accurately measuring brain
function, neuropsychology and cognitive
neuroscience have become some of the most active
areas in contemporary psychology. - With the increasing involvement of other
disciplines (such as philosophy, computer
science, and neuroscience) in the quest to
understand the mind, the umbrella discipline of
cognitive science has been created as a means of
focusing such efforts in a constructive way.
24Todays Psychologists
- As you have seen in this brief overview of
psychologys history, this discipline has seen
dramatic growth and change since its official
beginnings in Wundts lab. The story certainly
does not end here. Psychology has continued to
evolve since 1960 and new ideas and perspectives
have been introduced. Recent research in
psychology looks at many aspects of the human
experience, from the biological influences on
behavior to the impact of social and cultural
factors. Today, the majority of psychologists
do not identify themselves with a single school
of thought. Instead, they often focus on a
particular specialty area or perspective, often
drawing on ideas from a range of theoretical
backgrounds. This eclectic approach has
contributed new ideas and theories that will
continue to shape psychology for years to come.
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)