Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Please take out a piece of paper and complete the following: 1.Write down the vocabulary word and definition.2 2. Choose ONE of these options and complete.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Please take out a piece of paper and complete the following: 1.Write down the vocabulary word and definition.2 2. Choose ONE of these options and complete."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Please take out a piece of paper and complete the following: 1.Write down the vocabulary word and definition.2 2. Choose ONE of these options and complete it. –Draw a picture that illustrates/explains the vocabulary word. –Rewrite the definition in your own words. –Write a sentence that includes the term and the information from the definition. Reticular Activating System (Reticular Formation or RAS)  The alertness control center of the brain that regulates the activity level of the body. Please turn in this week’s DMAs PSYCH. DMA

3  DMA/turn in  History of Psych  Guided notes Homework  Study for Unit I Test – Thursday, Mar. 8th TODAY’S AGENDA

4 Everyone needs a handout HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGY

5 One of the youngest sciences, psychology did not emerge as a formal discipline until the late 19th century. ORIGINS

6 However for centuries philosophers and religious scholars have wondered about the nature of the mind and the soul. Thus, the history of psychological thought begins in philosophy. ORIGINS

7  600 to 300 BC  Inquired about a wide range of psychological topics.  Nature of knowledge  How people come to know and understand the world.  Pleasure and pain  Motivation  Memory  Rationalization GREEK PHILOSOPHERS

8  Considered the causes of mental illness.  Many believed that it was the result of supernatural causes.  Socrates and Plato focused on psychological forces as the cause of mental disturbances.  Believed that “madness” results when a person’s irrational, animal-like mind overwhelms the intellectual, rational mind. OTHER ANCIENT THEORIES….

9  Galen (Greek physician)  Believed in a psychological basis for mental illness  He thought they resulted from an imbalance of the four bodily humors: black bile, yellow bile, blood, and phlegm.  For example, Galen thought that melancholia (depression) resulted from a person having too much black bile. MORE THEORIES….

10 Galen

11  1600s – Descartes  Theorized that the body and mind are separate entities.  He regarded the body as a physical entity and the mind as a spiritual entity, and believed the two interacted only through the pineal gland.  dualism. AND EVEN MORE THEORIES…

12 Descartes

13  Thomas Hobbes and John Locke  Argued that all human experiences are physical processes occurring within the brain and nervous system.  Sensations  Images  Thoughts  Feelings  This view became know as monism (the mind and body are the same) THOSE WHO DISAGREED WITH DESCARTES…

14  Is human knowledge inborn or is it the product of experience?  Nativists –believed that certain elementary truths are innate to the human mind.  Empiricists – believed that at birth a person’s mind is like a “blank slate” and all knowledge comes from experience. HUMAN KNOWLEDGE

15  Scientists began to study stimuli and sensation.  Darwin – believed that animals and humans evolved physically and behaviorally.  Doctors began to link language and the brain.  Also began to study the nature of mental disorders. PHYSIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) ROOTS

16 Darwin

17  Phrenology  Developed by Franz Joseph Gall.  Theory that every part of the head represents a different action, emotion, etc…  By feeling someone’s head you could discover the source of his/her problems. PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC THEORY

18 Phrenology Model

19  Mesmerism  Developed by Franz Anton Mesmer.  Believed that illness was caused by an imbalance of magnetic fluids in the body.  Waved a magnetic wand over a person’s body until he/she fell into a trance.  Early forerunner of modern hypnosis. PSEUDOSCIENTIFIC THEORY

20 Mesmer

21  Dosing in cold water.  Rotating (sometimes chained to a chair).  Restriction of movements.  Placing cage-like box upon head.  Prison.  Asylums. EARLY TREATMENT METHODS

22  Believed to be “mad”, “possessed”, “touched in the head” “to have weak character”, etc…  Often seen as an outcast and someone to be avoided. SOCIAL PERCEPTIONS OF THE MENTALLY ILL

23 Early Treatment Methods

24  1879 – Wilhelm Wundt established a lab devoted to the study of the mind.  Structuralism – discover the basic elements of consciousness.  Objective sensations (sight, taste, etc…)  Subjective feelings (emotional responses, mental images).  Goal was “to mark out a new domain of science”.  Scientists flocked to his lab. PSYCHOLOGY BECOMES A SCIENCE

25  Systematic  Rigorous observation  Introspection WUNDT’S METHODS

26 Wundt

27  William James  Trained in physiology and medicine.  Functionalism – how mental processes help organisms adapt to their environment.  Published Principles of Psychology.  Stream of consciousness  Formation of habits  Individuality  Link between mind and body  Emotions  The self THE FATHER OF MODERN PSYCHOLOGY

28 James

29 John Watson  Behaviorism  Psychology must focus upon observable, recordable data. B.F. Skinner  Reinforcement  Reward / punishment modifies behavior. Sigmund Freud  Psychoanalysis  Unconscious motives and internal conflicts shape behavior. IMPORTANT PSYCHOLOGISTS


Download ppt "Please take out a piece of paper and complete the following: 1.Write down the vocabulary word and definition.2 2. Choose ONE of these options and complete."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google