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A History of Psychology Chapter one: The study of the History of Psychology.

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2 A History of Psychology Chapter one: The study of the History of Psychology

3 A note before studying history of psychology Historical facts can change: Several Freud’s document will not be available until the 21th century Bias: History is highly selective and subjective Zeitgeist (the spirit of the time) influences the decision/trend “Internal” (psychology) vs. “external” (socio-cultural, political, or economic context) history Presentism (looking at past events from today’s perspectives) vs. Historicism (placing past events into their actual social and intellectual context)

4 Approaches to the History of psychology (Wertheimer, 2000) 1. Quasi-chronologies: one trend and then a different trend 2. The Great Schools of Psychology: structuralism, functionalism, Behaviorism, Gestalt Psychology, Psychoanalysis, Humanistic and Cognitive movement 3. Personal or professional autobiographies 4. Major figures in the history of psychology 5. History of organizations 6. History of psychological research

5 Why study history of psychology Avoid mistakes Indicate the original ideas, the lines of development The influence of the past helps shape the present …….

6 I. The Development of Modern Psychology One of the oldest disciplines Issues first raised in philosophy and theology Can be traced back to 5 th B.C. Plato and Aristotle

7 I. The Development of Modern Psychology Modern psychology distinct from the old discipline of philosophy A primarily scientific field Applies tools and methods from biology and physiology Relies on controlled observation and experimentation Objectivity and precision are continually sought and refined

8 Eastern Traditions in Psychology Similarly, psychology had been philosophical, religious, and moralistic in the eastern culture (e.g., Chinese culture) I-Ching Yin-Yang (balance and harmony within the environment) Confucius A series of practical teaching directed toward morals and politics; the rules of proper conduct in relationships Taoist Philosophy (e.g., Lao-Tze) Book of the Ways and of Virtue: a path to wise living A simple life that is close to nature Living in harmony with environment Buddhism

9 II. The Relevance of the Past for the Present History of psychology: common requirement for majors As early as 1911 64% of undergraduate: history of psychology as degree requirement Unique among the sciences in the focus on our history

10 II. The Relevance of the Past for the Present Graduate training in history of psychology 1969: history of psychology course in graduate training (U of Florida, U of Oklahoma, U of Pennsylvania, $ Texas A&M) Journal and other document: 1965: Journal of the History of the Behavioral Science 1965: Archives of the History of American Psychology (at University of Akron, Ohio)--25,000 books, 3,000 photographs, hundreds of film, etc. 1998: History of Psychology (Div 26 journal)

11 II. The Relevance of the Past for the Present Formal Organizations APA Division of the History of Psychology (Division 26) founded in 1966 The International Society for the History of the Behavioral and Social Science was founded in 1969

12 II. The Relevance of the Past for the Present The nature of history of psychology Values diversity within psychology Provides a framework for a coherent picture Values the influence of the past which shape the present History is the most systematic way to integrate the areas and issues in modern psychology Recognize relationships among ideas, theories, and research efforts that make the whole cohesive

13 III. The Data of History: Reconstructing psychology’s past How we study history Historiography: The principles, methods, and philosophical issues of historical research Data of science Conduct a laboratory experiment, observe behavior under controlled real-world conditions, take a survey, or calculate correlations…. Can be replicated by other scientists at other time and places Data of history Materials used to reconstruct lives, events, eras Not replicable, conditions not controlled From data fragments

14 III. The Data of History: Reconstructing psychology’s past Lost or suppressed data Lost: permanently or temporarily Suppressed: Freud’s materials to be opened in the 21 st century (to protect the privacy of Freud’s patients and their family and reputation of Freud and his family) Altered: Self-interest: Freud’s case; Skinner’s youth To protect: Freud’s cocaine use

15 III. The Data of History: Reconstructing psychology’s past Data Distorted in Translation Deliberately: Freud’s use of I and it (ego and id) Lack of equivalents b/w languages: Zeitgeist Gestalt By participants carelessly recording the relevant events

16 III. The Data of History: Reconstructing psychology’s past Self-serving data Skinner described in his autobiography his rigorous self-discipline as a graduate student. However, he denied later on => consulted other sources. History is dynamic and constantly changes and corrected when new data are reinterpreted or revealed.

17 IV. External Context in Psychology Economic opportunity War (WWI and WWII) Prejudice and Discrimination

18 IV. External Context in Psychology ---Economic opportunity From Experimental Psychology to Applied psychology More Ph.D. than job opportunities Established university In Midwest and West and increased teaching job But, psychology is the newest science and received smallest financial support Solving real world problems to get financial support 1890-1918: increased public school enrollments to 700% due to immigrants Actively apply psychology into education, teaching, and learning.

19 IV. External Context in Psychology ---War (WWI and WWII) Personnel selection, psychological testing, or engineering psychology---This work demonstrated to the public how useful psychology could be. Psychologist relocated from Europe to the US (because of Nazi menace in 1930s) After witnessing the WWI and WWII, Freud proposed that aggression as a significant motivation force for the human personality Erich Fromm: interested in abnormal behavior

20 IV. External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination Discrimination against women: Denied admission to graduate school, excluded from faculty position, lower salaries, encountered barrier to tenure Eleanor Gibson (Visual Cliff): not allow to use graduate students’ library, cafeteria, director’s facility in lab, or take seminars in Freudian psychology at Yale University Eleanor Gibson

21 IV.External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination Discrimination against women: James Cattell (mental testing): urging the acceptance of women in psychology 1983: he nominated 2 women for APA membership APA—the 1 st scientific society to admit women. Female APA members: 15% (1893- 1921), 20% (1938)…. James Cattell

22 Discrimination against women: Mary Calkins (psychology of selves): APA first female president in 1905 denied her doctorate from Harvard University. She only can be a person to sit-in one class or a guess in the lab. Mary Calkins IV. External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination

23 Discrimination based on ethic origin Late 1800s: a policy to exclude Jewish professors from faculty position (John Hopkins University and Clark University) 1960s: admissions quotas for Jewish college students Julian Rotter (Internal vs. External Control) : was warned that “Jew simply could not get academic jobs regardless of their credentials” in 1941. Julian Rotter

24 IV.External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination Maslow was urged by his professor at the University of Wisconsin to change his first name to “something less obviously Jewish”, so that he would have a better chance to obtaining an academic job. Maslow refused to do so. Abraham Maslow

25 IV.External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination Discrimination based on ethic origin 8 out of 3700 Ph.D in psychology was Black (1920-1966) Kenneth Clark (psychological effects of racial segregation): 1 st African American president at APA. Rejected by Cornell U graduate admission because of race, received his doctoral degree from Columbia University in 1940 The Clarks

26 IV.External Context in Psychology ----Prejudice and Discrimination Mamie Clark (his wife): earned a doctoral degree at Columbia University Could not find the academic job; found a job analyzing data The Clarks’ research on racial identity and self-concept issues for Black children impacts the decision to end racial segregation in public school in 1954.

27 IV.External Context in Psychology Even the Rat was White Recent…Prejudice and Discrimination Few female and minority psychologist were listed in the history of psychology or great psychologists Book: Even the Rat was White (1998) A project of “Great psychologist of color” is conducting by U of Notre Dame (2003)

28 V.Personalistic and Naturalistic theory of scientific history Personalistic theory: The view that progress and change in scientific history are attributable to the ideas of unique individual; focused on the achievement and contributions of specific individuals. However, often individuals were not recognized during their lifetimes.

29 V.Personalistic and Naturalistic theory of scientific history Naturatlistic theory The view that progress and change in scientific history are attributable to the Zeitgeist (the spirit or climate of the times), which makes a culture receptive to some ideas by not to others Darwin: his theory developed is because the intellectual climate was ready to accept such a way of explaining the origin of the human species.

30 V.Personalistic and Naturalistic theory of scientific history Problems? An established theory can determine the ways in which data are organized and analyzed as well as research results permitted to be published or not. Findings oppose current thinking may be rejected by a journal’s editors. John Garcia: challenging the S-R learning theory. Major journals refused to accept his articles. (later, he received the APA’s Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award for his research

31 VI. Schools of Thought in the evolution of modern psychology. School of thoughts A group of psychologists who become associated ideologically and sometimes geographically, with the leader of a movement.

32 VII. Schools of Thoughts Each school points to the weakness of the old school and offered new definitions, concepts, and research strategies to correct the previous school.

33 VII. Schools of Thoughts Structuralism Functionalism Behaviorism Gestalt psychology Psychoanalysis Humanistic psychology Cognitive psychology


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