The document provides an overview of the history and development of psychology, from early philosophers like Aristotle and theorists like Freud, to the establishment of experimental psychology by Wundt and the different approaches that emerged such as behaviorism, humanistic psychology, and various subfields and applications of psychology today. It also discusses key concepts, methods, and ethical issues within the field.
2. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)
http://faculty.washington.edu
Aristotle, a naturalist and philosopher, theorized
about psychology’s concepts. He suggested that the
soul and body are not separate and that knowledge
grows from experience.
3. Wundt and psychology’s
first graduate students
studied the “atoms of the
Wundt (1832-1920)
mind” by conducting
experiments at Leipzig,
Germany, in 1879. This
work is considered the
birth of psychology as we
know it today.
4. Freud (1856-1939)
Sigmund Freud, an Austrian physician, and his
followers emphasized the importance of the
unconscious mind and its effects on human behavior.
5. Psychology originated in many disciplines
and countries. It was, until the 1920s,
defined as the science of mental life.
6. Behaviorists
Skinner (1904-1990)
Watson (1878-1958)
Watson and later Skinner emphasized the study of
overt behavior as the subject matter of scientific
psychology.
7. Humanistic Psychology
Maslow (1908-1970)
http://facultyweb.cortland.edu
Rogers (1902-1987)
http://www.carlrogers.dk
Maslow and Rogers emphasized current
environmental influences on our growth potential
and our need for love and acceptance.
8. We define psychology today as the scientific study
of behavior (what we do) and mental processes
(inner thoughts and feelings).
9. The American Psychological Association is the
largest organization of psychology with 160,000
members world-wide, followed by the British
Psychological Society with 34,000 members.
10. 1. Psychology’s Biggest Question
2. Psychology’s Three Main Levels of
Analysis
3. Psychology’s Subfields
4. CLOSE-UP: Tips for Studying Psychology
11.
12. Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Neuroscience How the body and brain How are messages
enables emotions? transmitted in the body? How
is blood chemistry linked with
moods and motives?
Evolutionary How the natural selection How does evolution influence
of traits the promotes the behavior tendencies?
perpetuation of one’s
genes?
Behavior genetics How much our genes and To what extent are
our environments psychological traits such as
influence our individual intelligence, personality,
differences? sexual orientation, and
vulnerability to depression
attributable to our genes? To
our environment?
13. Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Psychodynamic How behavior springs How can someone’s
from unconscious drives personality traits and
and conflicts? disorders be explained in
terms of sexual and
aggressive drives or as
disguised effects of unfulfilled
wishes and childhood
traumas?
Behavioral How we learn observable How do we learn to fear
responses? particular objects or
situations? What is the most
effective way to alter our
behavior, say to lose weight or
quit smoking?
14. Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Cognitive How we encode, process, How do we use information
store and retrieve in remembering? Reasoning?
information? Problem solving?
Social-cultural How behavior and How are we — as Africans,
thinking vary across Asians, Australians or North
situations and cultures? Americans – alike as members
of human family? As products
of different environmental
contexts, how do we differ?
15. Psychologist What she does
Explore the links between brain and
Biological
mind.
Study changing abilities from womb to
Developmental
tomb.
Study how we perceive, think, and solve
Cognitive
problems.
Personality Investigate our persistent traits.
Explore how we view and affect one
Social
another.
17. Psychologist What she does
Studies, assesses, and treats people with
Clinical
psychological disorders
Helps people cope with academic,
Counseling
vocational, and marital challenges.
Studies and helps individuals in school
Educational
and educational settings
Industrial/ Studies and advises on behavior in the
Organizational workplace.
19. A clinical psychologist (Ph.D.) studies, assesses,
and treats troubled people with psychotherapy.
Psychiatrists on the other hand are medical
professionals (M.D.) who use treatments like drugs
and psychotherapy to treat psychologically
diseased patients.
20. 1. How can we differentiate between uniformed
opinions and examined conclusions?
2. The science of psychology helps make these
examined conclusions, which leads to our
understanding of how people feel, think, and act
as they do!
21. Many people believe that intuition and common
sense are enough to bring forth answers regarding
human nature.
Intuition and common sense may aid queries,
but they are not free of error.
23. Hindsight Bias is the “I-knew-it-all-along”
phenomenon.
After learning the outcome of an event, many
people believe they could have predicted that very
outcome. We only knew the dot.com stocks would
plummet after they actually did plummet.
24. Sometimes we think we know
more than we actually know.
Anagram
How long do you think it
would take to unscramble WREAT WATER
these anagrams?
ETYRN ENTRY
People said it would take
GRABE BARGE
about 10 seconds, yet on
average they took about 3
minutes (Goranson, 1978).
25. The scientific attitude is composed of curiosity
(passion for exploration), skepticism (doubting
and questioning) and humility (ability to accept
responsibility when wrong).
26. Critical thinking does
not accept arguments
Courtesy of the James Randi Education Foundation
and conclusions blindly.
It examines
assumptions, discerns
hidden values,
evaluates evidence and
assesses conclusions.
The Amazing Randi
27. Psychologists, like all scientists, use the scientific
method to construct theories that organize,
summarize and simplify observations.
28. A theory is an explanation that integrates
principles and organizes and predicts behavior or
events.
For example, low self-esteem contributes to
depression.
29. A hypothesis is a testable prediction, often
prompted by a theory, to enable us to accept, reject
or revise the theory.
People with low self-esteem are apt to feel more
depressed.
30. Research would require us to administer tests of
self-esteem and depression. Individuals who score
low on a self-esteem test and high on a depression
test would confirm our hypothesis.
31.
32. Case Study
A technique in which one person is studied in
depth to reveal underlying behavioral principles.
Susan Kuklin/ Photo Researchers
Is language uniquely human?
33. A technique for ascertaining the self-reported
attitudes, opinions or behaviors of people usually
done by questioning a representative, random
sample of people.
http://www.lynnefeatherstone.org
34. Wording Effects
Wording can change the results of a survey.
Q: Should cigarette ads and pornography be
allowed on television? (not allowed vs. forbid)
35. Random Sampling
If each member of a
population has an equal
chance of inclusion into a
sample, it is called a
random sample
(unbiased). If the survey
sample is biased, its
results are not valid. The fastest way to know about the
marble color ratio is to blindly
transfer a few into a smaller jar and
count them.
36. Observing and recording the behavior of animals in the
wild and recording self-seating patterns in a multiracial
school lunch room constitute naturalistic observation.
Courtesy of Gilda Morelli
38. Q1. Can laboratory experiments illuminate
everyday life?
Ans: Artificial laboratory conditions are created to
study behavior in simplistic terms. The goal is to
find underlying principles that govern behavior.
39. Q2. Does behavior depend on one’s culture and gender?
Ans: Even when specific attitudes and behaviors vary across
cultures, as they often do, the underlying processes are much the
same. Biology determines our sex, and culture further bends the
genders. However, in many ways woman and man are similarly
human.
Ami Vitale/ Getty Images
41. Q4. Is it ethical to experiment on people?
Ans: Yes. Experiments that do not involve any
kind of physical or psychological harm beyond
normal levels encountered in daily life may be
carried out.
43. Q6. Is psychology potentially dangerous?
Ans: It can be, but is not when practiced
responsibly. The purpose of psychology is to help
humanity with problems such as war, hunger,
prejudice, crime, family dysfunction, etc.
Hinweis der Redaktion
“ The soul is not separable from the body, and the same holds good of particular parts of the soul.” Aristotle, De Anima, 350 B.C.
Preview Question 1: What are some important milestones in the development of the science of psychology?
Preview Question 2: What is psychology’s historic big issue?
Preview Question 3: What are psychology’s levels of analysis and related perspectives?
Preview Question 4: What are psychology’s main subfields?
Preview Question 5: Why are the answers that flow from the scientific approach more reliable than those based on intuition and common sense?
Preview Question 6: What attitudes characterize scientific inquiry, and what does it mean to think critically?
Preview Question 7: How do psychologists use the scientific method to construct theories?
Preview Question 8: How do psychologists observe and describe behavior?
Preview Question 12: Can laboratory experiments illuminate everyday life?
Preview Question 13: Does behavior depend on one’s culture and gender?
Preview Question 14: Why do psychologists study animals, and is it ethical to experiment on animals?
Preview Question 15: Is it ethical to experiment on people?
Preview Question 16: Is psychology free of value judgments?