A History of Modern Psychology

Höfundur Per Saugstad

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781107109896

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Útgáfuár

7.990 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Half title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Foreword
  • 1 Introduction
  • A Short Characterization of Present-Day Psychology
  • The Present Approach to the Study of the History of Psychology
  • How Did Empirical Psychology Originate?
  • Edwin Boring’s Book on the History of Psychology
  • History as University Politics
  • Philosophy and Scientific Empirical Psychology
  • Sigmund Koch’s View of the History of Psychology
  • Expansion in Natural Science
  • Where Did Psychology Originate?
  • The Emergence of Scientific Psychology
  • Why Is Psychology Changing?
  • Progress in Empirical Psychology
  • Scientific Psychology Has a Basis in Everyday Knowledge
  • No Simple Criteria for the Assessment of Progress in Empirical Research
  • Plan for the Book
  • 2 The Scientific and Intellectual Environment of the Mid-1800s
  • A New View of Body and Soul
  • Immediate Experience: The Soul Detached from the Body
  • Progress in the Study of the Brain
  • The Concept of the Reflex in Philosophy and Early Physiology
  • Positivism and British Empiricist Philosophy
  • Auguste Comte (1798-1857): A Society Governed by Science
  • Science and Society
  • John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)
  • Scientific Thinking During the 1800s: Mechanism and Positivism
  • The Emergence of Mechanistic Views in Psychology
  • Ernst Mach (1838-1916)
  • The Scientific Ideal of Later Positivism: Accurate Observation and Description
  • 3 The Early Physiological Study of Perception
  • German Experimental Psychology (1850-1940): Introduction to Chapters 3, 4, and 5
  • German Society and Culture
  • The German University System
  • Description of the Mental Experience
  • Psychophysics
  • Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795-1878)
  • Gustav Theodor Fechner (1802-1887)
  • Johannes Müller (1801-1858)
  • Müller and Helmholtz on the Law of the So-called Specific Nerve Energies
  • Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894)
  • The Speed of Conduction in Nerves
  • Studies in Perception
  • Helmholtz’s General View of Perception
  • Perception as Interpretation and Construction
  • Müller and Helmholtz on Attention
  • Helmholtz on Science and Psychology
  • Physicalism in Physiology
  • Proximate and Ultimate Explanations
  • Ewald Hering (1834-1918): An Alternative Approach to Perception
  • Emphasis on Phenomenological Description
  • Biological Mechanisms Behind Perception
  • 4 Expansion of German Experimental Psychology
  • Central Figures in Early German Experimental Psychology
  • Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
  • A Short Biography
  • Idealist or Positivist? Wundt’s Philosophical System
  • Wundt’s Scientific Psychology
  • The Subject Matter of Psychology
  • Wundt’s View of Method
  • Wundt’s Psychological System
  • Sensations and Feelings
  • Perception and Apperception
  • Empirical Research in the Leipzig Laboratory
  • Concluding Remarks About Wundt
  • Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909)
  • Verbal Learning and Memory: A Quantitative Approach
  • Evaluation of Ebbinghaus
  • Georg Elias Müller (1850-1934)
  • Müller’s Research
  • Oswald Külpe (1862-1915) and the Würzburg School
  • Külpe’s Introduction to Psychology
  • The Research of the Würzburg School
  • Imageless Thought
  • Thinking as a Result of the Task
  • Otto Selz (1881-1944)
  • Concluding Remarks on the Würzburg School
  • William Preyer (1842-1897) and the Absence of Ontogenesis in German Experimental Psychology
  • 5 Phenomenology and Gestalt Psychology
  • A New Generation’s View of Perception: Focus on Wholes
  • Phenomenology: A Historical Outline
  • Franz Clemens Brentano (1838-1917)
  • Brentano’s View of Empirical Psychology
  • Husserl’s Pure Phenomenology
  • Phenomenology and Introspection
  • Rubin’s Studies of Figure-Ground
  • The Idea of Gestalt Qualities: Christian von Ehrenfels (1859-1932)
  • Carl Stumpf (1848-1936): Perception of Relationships
  • Part-Whole
  • German Psychology from World War I to World War II
  • Gestalt Psychology
  • The Study of Whole and Form
  • The Triumvirate: Wertheimer, Koffka, and Köhler
  • Max Wertheimer (1880-1941)
  • Kurt Koffka (1886-1943)
  • Wolfgang Köhler (1887-1967)
  • The Empirical Research of the Gestalt Psychologists
  • Stroboscopic Movement and the phi-Phenomenon
  • The Brain as a Field of Force
  • Relationships Between Consciousness and Physiology
  • The Gestalt Laws
  • An Evaluation of the Gestalt Laws
  • The Perceptual Constancies
  • Relationships as Explanation of the Constancies
  • The Study of Thinking
  • Köhler’s Studies of Thinking in Chimpanzees
  • Animal Studies of Perceptual Constancy
  • Wertheimer’s View of Problem Solving and Teaching
  • Problem Solving as a Successive Reformulation of the Problem
  • Functional Fixedness
  • Evaluation of Gestalt Psychology
  • Kurt Lewin (1890-1947)
  • A Short Biography
  • Lewin and Gestalt Psychology
  • Lewin’s Field Theory
  • An Evaluation of Lewin’s Field Theory
  • Lewin on Conflicts and Motivation
  • Noncompleted Tasks
  • Desires and Self-Esteem: Level of Aspiration
  • Dembo’s Study of Anger
  • An Evaluation of Lewin’s View of the Person and the Situation
  • 6 Early British Psychology
  • British Social Life and Culture
  • The Study of Evolution
  • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829)
  • Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
  • Darwin as a Product of British Science and Social Life
  • Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
  • A Functional View of Consciousness
  • Evolution of the Intellect
  • Francis Galton (1822-1911)
  • Galton’s Life
  • Galton on Heredity and Environment
  • The Program of Eugenics
  • Galton on Individual Differences and Intelligence
  • Associative Connections and Mental Representations
  • Summary and Evaluation
  • Alexander Bain (1818-1903): New Ideas of Learning by Association
  • Bain’s Life
  • 7 British Comparative Psychology
  • The Intellectual Capacities of Humans and Animals
  • Georges Romanes (1848-1894)
  • Conway Lloyd Morgan (1852-1936)
  • Leonard Hobhouse (1864-1928)
  • Instincts: Innate or Learned?
  • Douglas Spalding (1840-1877)
  • Morgan on Instincts and Behavior
  • The Problem of Motivation
  • William McDougall (1871-1938)
  • European Ethology
  • The Inner Source of Energy
  • 8 Russian Reflexology
  • Political and Cultural Setting
  • Ivan Sechenov (1829-1905)
  • A Short Biography
  • The Nervous System as a Machine
  • Ivan P. Pavlov (1849-1936)
  • A Short Biography
  • Behavior and Thinking as Reflexes
  • Conditioned Reflexes
  • Vladimir M. Bekhterev (1857-1927)
  • Bekhterev’s Life
  • Disagreements Between Bekhterev and Pavlov
  • 9 The Study of Clinical Psychology and Unusual Mental States in France
  • A Sketch of the History of Psychiatry in the Nineteenth Century: Introduction to Chapters 9 and 10
  • The Era of Asylums
  • Historical and Social Background
  • The French University and Educational System
  • Politics, Philosophy, and Psychology
  • The Study of Hypnosis
  • Johannes Gassner (1729-1779)
  • Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815)
  • Beliefs Concerning Hypnosis Within Science
  • Interest in Abnormal Mental States
  • Hysteria and Neurosis
  • Jean-Martin Charcot (1835-1893)
  • Hippolyte Bernheim (1849-1919): Criticism of Charcot
  • Positivist Attitudes to Psychology
  • Théodule-Armand Ribot (1839-1916)
  • Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893)
  • Pierre Janet (1859-1947)
  • A Brief Biography
  • A Link Between Wundt and Freud
  • Automatism as Element, and Hypnosis as Method
  • Automatisms, Mental Disorders, and the Unconscious
  • An Evaluation of Janet’s Contributions
  • Alfred Binet (1857-1911)
  • The Psychology of Thinking
  • Individual Differences
  • The Development of Intelligence Tests
  • What is Intelligence?
  • Claude Bernard (1813-1870)
  • The Later Development of French Psychology
  • 10 Psychodynamic Psychology
  • Vienna During the Austro-Hungarian Empire
  • Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
  • Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1906)
  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
  • A Sketch of Freud’s Life
  • Freud’s Ideas of a Scientific Psychology and Procedure
  • Freud’s Concept of the Unconscious
  • Freud’s View of Motivation and Sexuality
  • Structure and Mode of Operation of the Psyche
  • Summary and General Conclusions
  • Emil Kraepelin and Freud
  • Ego Psychology
  • Anxiety and Defense Mechanisms
  • Object Relations Theory
  • Erik Erikson (1902-1992)
  • Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1963)
  • Alfred Adler (1870-1937)
  • 11 Early American Psychology (1890-1920)
  • Some Features of Nineteenth-Century American Society
  • Science Directed Towards Practical Life
  • Foundations of Early American Psychology
  • Pragmatism
  • William James (1842-1910)
  • A Biographical Sketch
  • James on Subject Matter and Methods in the Study of Psychology
  • James on Instincts and Habits
  • Attempt at Describing Consciousness
  • Thoughts About a Self
  • The Nature of Attention
  • Of Emotions
  • Of the Will
  • Evaluation of James’s Contributions
  • Granville Stanley Hall (1844-1922)
  • Hall’s Background
  • Studies of Childhood and Adolescence
  • Hall’s Contributions
  • John Dewey (1859-1952)
  • A Biographical Sketch
  • Dewey’s Philosophy
  • Dewey on the Reflex Arc
  • James Mark Baldwin (1861-1934)
  • A Biographical Sketch
  • The Study of Socialization as a Bridge Between Sociology and Psychology
  • Baldwin’s Idea of a Genetic Epistemology and Contributions to Biology
  • George Herbert Mead (1863-1931)
  • The Relationship Between the Individual and Society
  • An Evaluation of Mead
  • Applied Psychology and Professionalization of Psychology
  • James McKeen Cattell (1860-1944)
  • Educational Psychology and Professionalization
  • Intelligence Tests
  • Applied Psychology in Public and Private Administration
  • US Comparative Psychology
  • Edward Bradford Titchener (1867-1927)
  • James Rowland Angell (1869-1949) and Functionalism
  • 12 Behaviorism
  • Innovations in Psychology in the United States: Introduction to Chapters 12-15
  • Core Ideas in US Behaviorism
  • The Stimulus-Response Paradigm
  • Concentration on the Study of Learning
  • Emphasis on Environmental Factors
  • Edward Lee Thorndike (1874-1949)
  • A Biographical Sketch
  • Thorndike’s Move from a Spencerian to a Behaviorist Position
  • Thorndike’s Experimental Studies
  • An Evaluation of Thorndike’s Experiments
  • Thorndike and His British Precursors
  • Thorndike’s Later Research
  • Thorndike on Comparative Psychology
  • John Broadus Watson (1878-1958)
  • A Biography
  • Loeb: A Source of Inspiration to Watson and Skinner
  • Watson’s Academic Career
  • Watson on Science and Psychology
  • Stimulus and Response
  • The Goal of Scientific Psychology: Prediction and Control
  • Watson on Thinking and Language
  • Watson on Emotions
  • Evaluation
  • Operationalism
  • B. F. Skinner (1904-1990)
  • A Short Biography
  • View of Science
  • The Skinner Box
  • Operant Conditioning
  • View of Behavior
  • Interpretation of Skinner’s Experimental Findings
  • Skinner on Language
  • Evaluation
  • Behavior Therapy
  • 13 Neobehaviorism
  • Clark Leonard Hull (1884-1952)
  • A Biographical Sketch
  • Hull’s View of Science
  • Some Central Features in Hull’s System
  • The Concepts of Stimulus, Response, and Drive
  • Evaluation
  • Hull’s Students
  • Kenneth Spence (1907-1967)
  • Recognition of Relationships, or Learning?
  • The Role of Attention in Learning
  • Edward Chase Tolman (1886-1959)
  • A Short Biography
  • Purposive Behavior
  • Operational Definitions of Mentalistic Concepts
  • Tolman on Learning
  • Cognitive Maps
  • Evaluation of Tolman
  • Logical Positivism
  • Logical Analysis of the Language of Science
  • From the Axiomatic System to the Hypothetico-Deductive Method
  • James J. Gibson (1904-1979)
  • Our Mental Experience
  • Gradients
  • An Evaluation of Gibson’s Theory
  • 14 Social Psychology
  • The Two Social Psychologies
  • The Organization of Social Psychology as a Subdiscipline of Psychology: The Ideas of Floyd and Gordo
  • The Study of Attitudes
  • The Study of Attitude Change and Persuasion
  • The Introduction of the Experimental Method into Social Psychology
  • Kurt Lewin and His Students
  • Muzafer Sherif (1906-1988)
  • Solomon Asch (1907-1996): On Conformity
  • Stanley Milgram (1933-1984): Experiment on Obedience to Authority
  • An Evaluation of the Experimental Method in Social Psychology
  • The Influence on Social Psychology from Phenomenology and Gestalt Psychology
  • Inconsistency and Cognitive Dissonance
  • The Theory of Cognitive Dissonance
  • Person Perception (Ordinary Personology)
  • Asch’s Studies of Impression Formation
  • Heider’s Study of Attribution
  • Doubt and Self-Criticism
  • 15 The Psychology of Personality in the United States
  • Gordon Allport (1897-1967)
  • Allport’s Ideas of the Study of Personality
  • Personality Described by Traits
  • The Importance to Personality of Self
  • Further Development of Trait Theory
  • Raymond Cattell (1905-1998)
  • Hans Eysenck (1916-1997)
  • Henry A. Murray (1893-1988)
  • TAT and Projective Tests
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Carl Rogers (1902-1987)
  • Personal Life Experience and View on Psychology: A Biographical Outline
  • Influence of Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
  • View of Psychology as a Science
  • View of Psychotherapy and Personality
  • Rogers and Freud: Similarities and Differences
  • Self-Actualization as a Therapeutic Goal
  • Rogers on the Self
  • Evaluation of Rogers’s Contribution
  • George Kelly (1905-1967)
  • Biographical Outline
  • Cultural Influences on Kelly’s Thinking
  • A System of Personal Constructs
  • Kelly’s View of Psychotherapy
  • Discussion and Evaluation
  • Culture and Personality
  • The Authoritarian Personality
  • The Crisis in the Study of Personality
  • 16 The Study of Cognition in Europe and the United States (1920-1960)
  • Three Influential European Cognitive Psychologists: Piaget, Vygotsky, and Bartlett
  • Jean Piaget (1896-1980)
  • A Brief Biography
  • The Genetic-Epistemological Approach
  • Egocentricity in Children
  • Stages in Logical Thinking
  • The Sensorimotor Stage
  • The Preoperational Stage
  • The Concrete-Operational Stage
  • The Formal-Operational Stage
  • Cognition and Bodily Movements
  • Evaluation of the Stage Theory
  • Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)
  • Notes About Vygotsky’s Life
  • Vygotsky, Marx, and Wundt
  • Vygotsky on the Development of Language
  • Concluding Remarks
  • British Psychology and Frederic Bartlett (1886-1979)
  • Bartlett’s Ambivalence About Experimental Psychology
  • Bartlett’s Study of Remembering
  • The Study of Cognition in the United States (1920-1960)
  • Research on Thinking
  • The New Look in Perception
  • 17 Physiological Psychology
  • Advances in Neurophysiology
  • Robert Sessions Woodworth (1869-1962)
  • Woodworth on Motivation
  • Walter Cannon (1871-1945)
  • Stress and Psychosomatic Disease
  • Karl Lashley (1890-1958)
  • Some Biographical Notes
  • Lashley on Brain Localization
  • Lashley on the Nature of Motivation
  • Lashley’s Students and Coworkers on Motivation
  • Donald Hebb (1904-1985)
  • Hebb’s Theory
  • Evaluation of Hebb’s Theory
  • Roger Sperry (1913-1994)
  • The Revival of Wernicke’s Theory of Aphasia
  • A Case of Anterograde Amnesia
  • New Techniques in Neurology
  • Knowledge of the Visual System as a Guide to Understanding the Functioning of the Brain
  • The Role Played by the Primary Visual Cortex
  • Physiology and Psychology
  • 18 Revolt Against Traditions
  • Expansion in US Psychology
  • New Thoughts on Science
  • Thomas Kuhn’s View of Paradigms
  • Kuhn and Psychology
  • New Views on Human Beings: Humanistic Psychology
  • The Roots of Humanistic Psychology
  • The Growth of Humanistic Psychology
  • Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  • An Evaluation of Humanistic Psychology
  • Tendencies in Clinical Psychology from the 1960s
  • Decline in Interest in Behaviorism
  • Increased Interest in the Study of Cognition
  • Information Processing
  • Background in Advances in Technology
  • Information Processing: A Study of Knowledge
  • Early Attempts to Apply the New Perspectives in Psychological Research
  • The Study of Remembering
  • Some Early Experiments
  • The Atkinson and Shiffrin Model
  • Some Concluding Comments
  • 19 Important Trends in the Psychology of the Twenty-First Century
  • Progress in Social Psychology
  • Overcoming the Crisis in the Study of Attitudes
  • The Study of Attribution After Heider
  • The Fundamental Attribution Error
  • Health Psychology
  • The Study of Attraction and Close Relationships
  • Evaluation of Progress in Social Psychology
  • Progress in Personality Psychology
  • The Revival of Trait Theory
  • The Five-Factor Model
  • The Modern Study of the Self
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  • A New Perspective on Development: The Life-Span Study
  • Behavioral Genetics
  • The Revival of Interest in Comparative Psychology
  • Behaviorist Learning Psychology Meets Ethology
  • Theodore Schneirla (1902-1968)
  • Instinct, Maturation, and Learning
  • A New Orientation in the Study of Learning
  • Further Attacks on Conditioning and Associationism
  • Influence from Ethology on Developmental Psychology
  • Attachment Theory
  • Psychology and Evolution
  • Progress in Evolutionary Biology
  • Progress in the Study of Hominid Evolution
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • What Was New in Evolutionary Psychology?
  • Some Early Influential Studies
  • The Concept of an Adaptive Problem
  • Psychology and Culture
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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