History of Modern Psychology Key
Terms 11th Edition
Historiography - -The principles, methods, and philosophical issues of historical
research
Voluntarism - -The idea that the mind has the capacity to organize mental contents into
higher-level thought processes (Wilhelm Wundt 1832-1920)
Mechanism - -The doctrine that natural processes are mechanically determined and
capable of explanation by the laws of physics and chemistry
Extirpation - -A technique for determining the function of a given part of an animal's
brain by removing or destroying it and observing the resulting behavior changes
(Marshall Hall 1790-1857 & Pierre Flourens 1794-1867)
Zeitgeist - -The intellectual and cultural climate or spirit of the times
Determinism - -The doctrine that acts are determined by past events
Clinical method - -Posthumous examination of brain structures to detect damaged areas
assumed to be responsible for behavioral conditions that existed before the person died
(Paul Broca 1824-1880)
Mediate experience - -Experience that provides information about something other than
the elements of that experience (Wilhelm Wundt 1832-1920)
Personalistic theory - -The view that progress and change in scientific history are
attributable to the ideas of unique individuals
Reductionism - -The doctrine that explains phenomena on one level (such as complex
ideas) in terms of phenomena on another level (such as simple ideas)
Electrical stimulation - -A technique for exploring the cerebral cortex with weak electric
current to observe motor responses (Gustav Fritsch and Eduard Hitzig)
Immediate experience - -Experience that is unbiased by interpretation (Wilhelm Wundt
1832-1920)
Introspection - -Examination of one's own mind to inspect and report on personal
thoughts or feelings (Wilhelm Wundt 1832-1920)
Psychology