Psychology Chapter 1
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- Define Dualism
- 2 distinct conjoined entities: material body and immaterial soul, control behavior
- Contrast of Dualism?
- Materialism
- "Founder" of Dualism
-
Rene Descartes
Believed non-human animals do not have souls and reflexes involuntary respond to simuli - Define Materialism
- The spirit or soul is a meaningless concept and nothing exist but matter and enery by physical processes with body by brain
- Believed in Materialism?
- Thomas Hobbes
- Define Empiricism
- Belief that all human knowledge and though derive from sensory experience (i.e. vision, hearing, touch, ect.)
- Contrast of Empricisim
- Nativism
- Define Congnitive psychology
- natural divisions may exist among various mental processes and that the mind can be understood by indentifying those basic processes and discovering how they interact.
- Charles Darwin's Idea?
- living things have evolved from evolution, natural selection of organisms survive and reproduced
- Why is William Wundt the founder of scientific psychology?
-
1. wrote the 1st book of psychology that defined it as a science
2. opened the first university-based laboratory of psychology - Define structuralism
- Identifying the basic elements of the mind and to determine how those elements combine with one another to produce more complex thoughts
- Founder of Structuralism
- Edward Titchener
- Define Introspection
- Titchener's method to indentify the elements of a sensory experience. To look inward, to examine one's own conscious experience.
- 4 basic dimensions of every sensation?
- Quality, intensity, duration, clarity
- The problem of introspection?
- It is a private technique and sciences requires a public technique
- Define a public technique
- One that produces datat that can be observed by outsiders, not just by the individual user of the procedure
- Oppositiion of Titchener's perspecitve
- Gestalt psychology
- What would contemporary psychologists be most likely to choose as the main limitation of introspections as a data-collection technique?
- Its data are not available to anyone but the individual producing the data
- William James was a great thinker, writer, and teacher who helped make psychology known to the intellectual world. Jame's psychological perspectivie was known as?
- Structuralism
- What type of psychologist would focus on how people adapt to their surroundings?
- Functionally oriented psychologist
- Which psychologist proposed that the study of consciousness should be replaced by the study of behavior?
- John B. Watson
- What is social psychology?
- Concentration of how people are influenced by others at a given moment
- What is cultural psychology?
- Concentration of how cultures evolve over time and influence the psychology of their people
- Define actualizing tendancy?
- an inborn set of drives that go beyond basic animal needs and lead the individual to engage in creative activities
- Define humanistic psychology
- theories and clinical practices that centered on people's conscious understanding of themselves and capacity for self-control and presents an optimistic view of human nature
- What is true of both Watson's and Skinner's versions of behaviorism?
- Both theorists argued that unobservable events or mediating concepts, such as mental processes, are not useful as explanatory constructs in psychology
- Which psychologist would be most likely to conduct research with animals?
- A behavioral psychologist
- Describe a Cultural psychologist
- research on differences among people living in different parts of the worlds and how their thoughts, feelings, and behavior are influenced by where they live.
- What does not reflect the viewpoint of materialism?
- Even though the sould is intangible, its influence on the body is tagible and can therefore be studied scientifically.
- Define functionalism
- To understand a mind, one must look at the whoel thing and it's larger parts to see its full purpose.
- Founder of Functionalism
- William James
- What is Gestalt psychology
- That the mind must be understood in terms of organized wholes and not elementary parts.
- Define behaviorism
- Subject of study is obersvalbe behavior not the mind and the it should be understood in terms of its relationship to observable events in the environment rather than in terms of hypothetical events withing the individual
- Who is John Watson and his arguement?
- The founder of behaviorism; argued that all behavior is essentially reflexive as responses to events.
- What is S-R psychology?
-
Watson's brand of behaviorism
S: stimulus
R: response - Who is B.F. Skinner and his methods?
- A behaviorist who developed a new way to study animals and describe the learning processes
- Describe Skinner's emphasis?
- That stimuli are consequense of reponses: Operante responses: any behavioral actiontaht operates on the environment to produce a consequence like an electric shock
- Define ethology?
- The study of animal behavior in the natural environment.
- Founder of Ethology
- Konrad Lorenz
- Define physiological psychology
-
Aka: behavioral neuroscience
the attempt to understand the physcioloical mechanisms, in the brain and eslewhere, that organize and control bejavior. - Who is Sigmund Freud?
- He believed behavior was altered due to disturbing membories were buried in the unconscious mind.
- Psychoanalsis
- Freud's developer: treament for the unconsious mind. but leaves too much room for the analyst's subjective interpretation.
- What did William James do?
- Found the perspective of functionalism, great thinker, writer, and teacher
- What is the influence of computers on congintive psychology?
- This shows how fast people respond the colors and information from computers, ect.
- Difference between Watson's and Skinner's versions of behaviorism?
- Watson's believed stimuli that precede responses and Skinner believed stimuli are consequences of responses
- Difference between structuralism and functionalism
- Things don't have to be as analyzed in a structured way for functionalism, they can be understood by its purpose
- Differences between cultural psychology and social psychology
- cultural is how people are by the teachings of their cultural and social is how people are by the teachings of different people around them
- Difference between ethology and behaviorism
- how animals/humans behavior is a stimuli for a response and ethology is how animals are w/ their environment