Title: Chapter 9
1Chapter 9 Functionalism Darwin, galton,
cattell, james hall
2Midterm 2 Results
Score Grade N
45-55 A 11
40-44 B 7
35-39 C 10
29-34 D 12
0-28 F 3
Highest score 50 (2 people)
3Functionalists
- Functionalists were the first major non-German
school of psychology. - They were interested in studying the functions of
the mind and the adaptive value of consciousness. - These concerns were a product of the intellectual
climate of the 19th century, dominated by
Darwins theory of evolution. - Their work was later extended by the American
functionalists at the Univ. of Chicago and
Columbia.
4Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
- Darwin was born to a wealthy family with
interests in medicine and natural science. - The pivotal experience of his life was his 5-year
voyage on the Royal Navy survey ship, the H.M.S.
Beagle, where he collected specimens. - He first left med school got a poor
(third-class) degree in religion. - He was initially seeking confirmation of the
Biblical account of creation, but his experiences
changed his mind.
5The Voyage of the Beagle
At each stop, Darwin travelled extensively inland.
6Questions
- Darwins findings raised many questions
- Why had God created so many different species?
- Why had God allowed giant armadillos (found as
fossils) to become extinct but not the smaller
armadillos? - Why had God allowed some species to become
totally extinct? - How would there have been room on the ark for the
giant fossils? - How could the earth have been created in 4004 BC
when the age of the fossils was much older?
7The Galapagos Islands
The Galapagos Islands are part of the country of
Ecuador.
8Galapagos Observations
- Tortoises from islands just 50-60 miles apart had
clearly different shells. - On one island, finches had strong thick beaks to
crack nuts and seeds, while on another island
they had smaller beaks and fed on insects. - On a third island they had beaks better suited
for eating fruit, berries flowers. - Darwin wondered how such differences had
developed perhaps species are not fixed but are
able to adapt and change over generations.
9Theory of Evolution
- Darwins eventual theory was influenced by
writings of several theorists before him - Darwin read Quetelets summary of Malthuss view
of population growth Malthus predicted an
increasingly severe struggle for existence due to
lack of food. - It at once struck me that, under these
circumstances, favorable variations would tend to
be preserved and unfavorable ones destroyed
Darwin wrote. - He called this idea Natural selection or
Survival of the Fittest. (1859) He delayed
publication for 20 yrs.
10Publication of His Theory
- First Darwin published his journal The Voyage of
the Beagle which was very popular. - In 1858, he became aware of Wallaces theory of
natural selection, and agreed to present both his
and Wallaces theory jointly to the Linnean
Society. - There was little reaction.
- In 1859, he published his Origin of the
Species, which sold out immediately. - His theory was hotly debated (see famous Oxford
Wilberforce/Huxley debate on pg 308 of text).
11Similarity of Man to Animals
- Do we share behavioral, emotional and cognitive
characteristics with other species? - In The Descent of Man, Darwin argued that
there is no fundamental difference between man
and the higher mammals in their mental
faculties. (1871) - Morgans canon In no case may we interpret an
action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher
psychical faculty if it can be interpreted as the
outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower
in the psychological scale.
12Mechanism
- Darwin suggested no genetic mechanism for
evolutionary change. - Lamarck proposed that acquired characteristics
can be inherited by offspring, speeding up
change. - Gregor Mendel demonstrated inheritance of
physical characteristics in plants and laid the
foundation for modern genetics. - This was the mechanism for evolution.
13Darwins Psychology
- The Expression of the Emotions in Man
Animals. - Darwin studied facial expressions, anticipating
later research by Paul Ekman. - Darwin kept detailed records on the growth of his
son, Erasmus, and published them in A
Biographical Sketch of an Infant in Mind, 1877. - His methods were repeated by Jane Goodall,
Piaget, and B.F. Skinner. - Dar wins theory raised questions about the
adaptive value of consciousness and mind
survival
14Francis Galton (1822-1911)
- Galton was one of the last amateur scientists,
with eclectic interests - Meteorologist, experimented with stereoscopic
photos, studied fingerprints, invented an early
teletype. - Anthropologist and explorer (sought source of the
Nile). - Galton was impressed by how well people he met
had adapted to their harsh desert environment
(Kalahari). - He published Art of Travel.
15Individual Differences
- Galton was interested in measuring things
- Whenever you can, count. Fidgets per minute in
kids, middle-aged and elderly. Beauty map of
Britain. - In 1884 he established an anthropometric
laboratory to collect data on individual
differences. - Psychometrics measurement of mental powers.
- Visual auditory reaction times, highest audible
tone. - He published a method for quantifying correlation
later derived mathematically by Karl Pearson (r). - He used questionnaires, associations tests of
imagery.
16Galton as Hereditarian
- In Hereditary Genius he discussed the relative
contributions of environment genetics to
ability. - I propose to show in this book that a mans
natural abilities are derived by inheritance
under exactly the same limitations as are the
form and physical features of the whole organic
world. - He proposed that abilities were on the same
continuum as other physical traits Quetelets
law of deviation from the average (like the
normal curve). - Quetelet Galton established the normal man.
17Galton Statistics
- Galton developed the following terms
- Median, bell-shaped curve, correlation,
dispersion, interquartile range, regression,
percentile. - Galtons student Pearson introduced
- Histogram, kurtosis, random sampling, random
walk, skewness, standard deviation, variance. - Formula for the correlation coefficient,
Pearsons r. - The concept of dealing with individual
differences in a probabilistic way the
characteristics of a population are regular, even
if people are not.
18Nature and Nurture
- Galton argued that because talent seemed to
concentrate in eminent families (Hereditary
Genius), individuals must be inheriting such
abilities. - He introduced the terms nature vs nurture into
the debate and the idea of twin studies, see pg
322. - Candolle criticized this idea, cataloging the
favorable circumstances in eminent families. - In response, Galton wrote
- English Men of Science Their Nature and
Nurture.
19Galton and Eugenics
- Galton was fascinated by the idea of human
improvement via genetic control, which he called
Eugenics. - He proposed voluntary means of improvement.
- Eugenics societies and idea were widespread after
WWI G.B. Shaw Isadora Duncan (his brain). - Abuses were justified in the name of eugenics,
including forced sterilization and restrictive
immigration in the US. - With the rise of the Nazis, these were
implemented as Hitlers final solution to the
Jewish question.
20Inquiries into Human Faculties
- In 1872, Galton published Statistical Inquiries
into the Efficacy of Prayer. - He advocated for the use of control groups in
statistical comparisons. - Are prayers beneficial? Royalty have shorter
lifespans. - There is no evidence that missionary voyages are
safer. - In his Inquiry into Human Faculties and
Development, the chapters on prayer were omitted
from future editions due to controversy.
21James McKeen Cattell (1860-1944)
- Cattell was one of the first students to get a
Ph.D. with Wundt, then he was appointed to
Cambridge. - He was strongly influenced by Galton, and like
Galton measured everything he could about
himself. - In 1888, Cattell founded a lab at the University
of Pennsylvania using Galtonian measures with
students but moved to Columbia College in 1891. - He discussed 10 mental tests in Mental Tests and
Measurements, published in Mind The Freshman
Test.
22Cattells Anthropometric Tests
- The 10 tests included
- Dynamometer pressure, Rate of Movement,
Sensation-Areas, Pressure causing Pain, Least
Noticeable Difference in Weight, Reaction-Time
for Sound, Time for Naming Colours, Bi-Section of
a 50-cm. Line, Judgment of 10 Seconds Time,
Number of Letters Remembered on One hearing. - Wissler found no correlation between the tests.
- These tests were abandoned in favor of better
mental measurements (see Chapter 11).
23Cattells Other Work
- Experimental research on judgments of relative
rank, such as shades of gray rank ordered on
brightness. - Leading psychologists ranked those in their
profession. - Backgrounds of famous scientists a person had
the best chance if their father were clergy or
professor. - His famous students were Thorndike, Woodworth,
Strong (vocational test). - Published Science (AAAS). Founding member of APA.
His company developed WAIS, WISC, TAT.
24William James (1842-1910)
- In early 20th century, Americas foremost
psychologist. First on everyones list (Cattell). - As a young man, James floated directionless,
rejecting chemistry, natural science, dabbling in
medicine, until finally discovering psychology. - He visited Fechner, Helmholtz,Wundt
DuBois-Reymond. - He finally graduated in medicine. He was offered
a job at Harvard teaching physiology anatomy. - He contemplated suicide at age 28.
25Principles of Psychology
- In 1874, James taught his first class on
physiology and psychology (making it up as he
went along). - In 1882, he took a leave of absence to visit
European psychologists again. - In 1890, he published Principles of Psychology
which became an instant classic. - Theodore Roosevelt was a famous student of James.
- After the success of his book, he withdrew from
experimental research -- not worth the effort.
26Link to Principles of Psychology
- Available as an ebook that can be read on the
web - http//ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/j/james/william/prin
ciples/complete.html
27Eclectic Philosopher
- He became increasingly interested in mind-body
relationships and psychical phenomena. - Psychosomatic illness led to interest in mind
cures. - He studied automatic writing, telepathy,
clairvoyance, fortune-tellers, religious
experience (energy flow). - He wrote Pragmatism expressing a practical
philosophy pragmatic criteria for judging
truth. - All beliefs are judged by their consequences in
action. - If a belief in God works, it is a pragmatic truth
for that person.
28James as a Psychologist
- He opposed the Wundt-Titchener approach.
- He proposed an analytical approach that studies
the functions of consciousness its
characteristics. - Consciousness is adaptive lets us adjust to
environment - Also, personal, ever-changing (a stream),
selective. - James-Lange theory of emotion the perception of
changes in the nervous system constitute emotion. - Cannon criticized this view
- Habits are formed by nurture early in life.
29Views on Memory
- James said the strength of a memory depends on
the quality of the structure of the brain, an
innate characteristic not influenced by
experience. - Systematically linking facts together might
improve memory. - This contradicted the dominant view, formal
discipline, that said a general intellectual
faculty could be developed via exercise. - Memorizing poems (Victor Hugos Satyr and
Miltons Paradise Lost), he demonstrated
interference.
30G. Stanley Hall (1844-1924)
- A contemporary of James, Hall grew up in a farm
family of Puritan heritage. - At age 16, he worked as a village school teacher.
- Later, he attended Williams college and Union
Theological Seminary in NYC. - In 1869, he went to Europe, then returned
finished seminary and taught at Antioch College. - He ultimately did his Ph.D at Harvard, then went
back to Europe to study in Wundts lab.
31Halls Early Career
- Hall lectured on the German psychologists at
Harvard and Johns Hopkins which led to a job
there - The president of Johns Hopkins created
fellowships for grad students which attracted
excellent students. - Hall founded a great psychology dept and The
American Journal of Psychology. - Hall was the founding president of Clark
University. - Lots of problems, including being raided by Univ
of Chicago (2/3 of faculty 70 grad students
left). - Hall helped found the APA in 1892 was president
32Hall as Developmentalist
- In 1883, Hall developed questionniares for Boston
kindergarten children to assess the content of
their minds how children think. - He was the first psychologist to describe
adolescence as a separate stage. - He stressed the importance of genetics
evolution. - He developed a recapitulation theory
(embryological development recapitulates
evolutionary development). - As he grew older he became interested in aging.
33Hall vs Margaret Mead
- Hall felt that adolescent storm stress was
largely biological, mediated by family culture. - Mead disagreed, using a 1928 ethnography of Samoa
to depict adolescents as free of turmoil. - Freeman (1983) criticized Meads book, claiming
that she had diminished the aggression,
violence, and rivalry of Samoan life and
exaggerated thedegree of sexual freedom. - Orans (1996) supported Freeman, not Mead.
34Mead in Samoa
Although flawed, her book is still the most
widely read book in anthropology.
35The Clark Conference
- Hall organized the first opportunity for
Americans to meet Freud. - Freud gave 5 lectures, Jung gave 3 lectures
both received honorary degrees. - The lectures were published, bringing them to a
wider audience.