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History of Psychology - Lecture Notes

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These are my notes from the course History of Psychology. It covers all six lectures and is all you need, so don't buy the book, buy this summary and save a lot of money and time! Using only this, I got an 8.5 on the exam. The exam is based on the lecture slides with actual screenshots from them (a...

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  • June 12, 2023
  • 59
  • 2019/2020
  • Class notes
  • Jasper winkel
  • All classes
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History of Psychology



Lectures Overview

❖ Introduction, 3 themes
❖ 17th C. - Descartes, Hobbes
❖ 17th - 18th C. - Association Ψ
❖ 18th - 19th C. - Kant, phrenology, psychophysiology

❖ 20th C. - Behaviourism, cognitive Ψ
❖ 20th C. - Freud, psychiatry

❖ Summary + practice exam
❖ Practice exam + Q&A

Exam Material

❖ Lectures (slides + notes)
➢ Focus on ideas and theories
❖ Chapters from blackboard
❖ Book (selected chapters)
➢ Book focuses on personal histories (but we don’t, so read selectively)

Learning Objectives

❖ Introduce the important historical conceptions of psychology from 1600 until beginning of cognitive
psychology.
❖ Understand that the scientific conception of psychology and psychological functioning changes through
time.
❖ Understand that societal developments influence people’s beliefs concerning what is “scientific”
❖ Introduce the basic concepts of philosophy, epistemology.
❖ Train memorization skills.

Exam

1. Examples are explanatory. Important for understanding concepts (exam material)
2. Summary and explanation of key points:
a. Overview for studying the book (exam material)

Repetitions: elucidate diff concepts / links

,Group Sessions
Miss one session = get a fail for the session → allowed to do retake assignment
Miss two session = Not allowed to retake the assignment → you fail the group sessions (do it again next year)

Course grade = 0.7 x exam + 0.3 x group sessions!




CONTENT STARTS HERE

,Lecture 1

3 themes that are important now have their origin in the past:

1. Cognition vs Emotion
2. Mind vs Body
3. Nature vs Nurture
a. Shaped by genetics or environment

Example 1: Cognition vs Emotion

Antonio Damasio (1994):
Decartes’ error:
Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain.

Descartes (1596-1650)
“I think, therefore I am.”

Damasio: “I feel, therefore I am”

Case-study Phineas Gage 1848
❖ Aim: to investigate localization of function; how his brain damage resulted in a change of behaviour
❖ Participants: Phineas Gage
❖ Background: 25 year old railroad worker in 19th century
➢ Survived iron rod passing through his skull
➢ Entered below his left cheek and exited through the top of his skull on the frontal lobe
➢ JM Harlow nursed Gage to recovery, observed behaviour.
❖ Results: dramatic personality changes
➢ Little restraint, rude language, making grand plans for the future which he instantly replaced with
others. He was “no longer Gage”
❖ Conclusion: left prefrontal region damaged
➢ Frontal lobe controls personality


Example 2: The Mind - Body problem


John Anderson:
How can the human mind occur in the physical universe (2007)?

, Descartes (1596-1650):
Mind and body are separable
They constitute different substances


Heart of the debate:
What is the relationship between body and mind?


Different viewpoints:
1. Body and mind are separate. (dualism)
2. Body and mind consist of one whole. (monism)


Two extreme versions of the latter (monism) are:
1. Everything consists of matter (realism)
2. Mind is the basis of everything (idealism), e.g. Plato (approx 4270347 B.C.)


Nature vs Nurture
❖ Innate vs acquired
❖ Genes vs environment
❖ Instinct vs thought?


Example 3: Nature - Nurture debate


❖ Bell curve (normal distribution)
Heart of the debate:
1. How do we attain knowledge?
2. What causes differences between people?


Example: Plato
Knowledge is innate (the same for everybody)
rationalism (ratio = reason, the thought of process.)


All knowledge comes from experience.
Empiricism

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