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Summary history of psychology (tilburg university)

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This is a summary based on the lectures of History of psychology at Tilburg University

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History of psychology
CH1

Reasoning Socrates trough Plato

- People already have knowledge in their soul nativism
- We acquire knowledge by reasoning and thinking rationalism
- Idealism  true knowledge does not come from senses but from the ideal form, it resides in
your soul not the world around you
- Your mind is made up from different elements
1-appetites  striving for lustful things (want)
2- duty  things you don’t like but you learned that are good. (should)
Task of reason to guide these in the same direction

Aristoteles a student of Plato

- Epirism  knowledge consists of observation and your mind organizes this to create an
image, you automatically start classifying things. (Mind acts as a filter and knowledge comes
from outside)
- Different souls;
1- Vegetive souls  nourishment and reproduction (plants)
2- Sensitive souls sensation, locomotion(walk), memory and imagination (animals)
3- Rational souls  logical reasoning (humans)
- Difference is that Aristoteles says knowledge comes from the outside in and Plato says it
comes from the inside out.

Alhazen

- Is seeing something active or hearing? Out or in?
- Eye works like a camera obscura.

Avicenna

- Describes the interior senses, common sense, imagination, memory, and estimation
(opportunity or threat) and appetition (avoid or approach) this is an elaboration on
Aristoteles.
- Something that is independent from the senses  self-awareness.


CH2

Theme 1  what is the relationship between body and mind?
Theme 2  how do we acquire knowledge about the world?

Descartes

Theme 1
- Wanted to have true knowledge, noticed that books and teacher co9uld not be trusted, his
way is the only way.
- He should be co0nvinced by what is true of not  started doubting everything


BvH

, - Search for simple natures  fundamental properties of simple nature that you could not
doubt.
- Knowledge was more about thinking (deduction) above sensory experiences (induction)
- Physical world had two properties that cannot be doubted: extension and motion
Relates to Galileo  primary qualities (shape, quantity, motion) - physical objects
 secondary qualities (sights, sounds, feelings) - interacting with these physical objects

Physics
- Whole universe is filled with particles, no empty space.
 these particles have extension and motion.
- You can see the human body as an object  mechanistic physiology  the body as a
machine.
 Nerves are hollow, filled with animal spirit (cerebrospinal fluid)
Reflex = - stimulus (external world) +
- response (organism behavior) > burning? Automatically pull back
Particles move into the nerves  moves the animal spirit (fluid)  moves upwards into the
brain  flows back through motor nerves  activate the muscles
- Acquired reflexes = reflexes you learn (driving)
 learning means that the structure of the brain changes such that the same stimulus can
lead to a different or even automatic response.
- With this the emotions can be explained (anger  fluid go quickly through your body)

Theme 2
- Interaction body and outside world, no soul needed (Aristoteles soul)
Retained one type of soul  rational soul
- You can doubt your senses (colors or shapes are maybe not there)
But  I cannot doubt that there is somebody doubting, Cognito ergo sum (I think therefore I
am)
- Innate ideas = soul has ideas, independent of senses and the outside world.
- Body and mind are different things (Plato)
- Elizabeth Bohemia  hoe the material body and the immaterial mind interact?
Descartes answered not how but where  pineal glands
Body is double, soul is one (interactive dualism) - explained with vision
Locke

- How does knowledge emerge?
- Picked up from idea Descartes  learn things from the outside world (mechanistic,
automatic way)
- Soul is not necessary for knowledge (rejects interactive dualism)
- There are two things: - sensations (input) and reflections (combinations of sensations)
 these create memories in your mind
- Three types of knowledge:
1- Intuitive- experience
2- Demonstrative- explainable knowledge
3- Sensitive- knowledge you get from interacting with the world through senses
Simple ideas (red, round)
Complex ideas (apple, hunger)
- Association of ideas:
Contiguity- if two things cooccur in time, you tend to associate them
Similarity- if two things look alike, you treat them alike




BvH

, - Molyneux supports Locke, blind person experience world through feeling, you don’t
recognize by sight what you know by senses.

Leibniz

- Mind being active in constructing knowledge about the world
- Inspired by idea of pantheism god is not a person, god is everything
idea of the microscope, whole world consists of living things at different levels
idea of monad world consist of entities who have the capacity to be aware
1 Bare monads- resemble someone in deep sleep
2 Sentient monad- capacity of perception
3 Rational monad- perception and apperception (you can consciously be aware)
4 Supreme nomad- god aware of everything
- World as one interconnected organism
- Minute observations  what you now experience is not all that you have, you have
unconscious observations

CH3

Theme: localization  where in the brain are psychological characteristics?
Relationship between brain and psychology

Franz Joseph Gall:

- Studied brain anatomy  neurons, white/grey matter, commissures (Willis)
- Commissures relationships between two sides of the brain (elaborated by Gall)
- Does specific characteristics relate to the structure of the brain
- If a larger brain means more complex behavior, people with certain characteristics have
larger brain is certain areas  phrenology
- Can feel from the skulls if you have more brain (lump on the skull)
- Physiognomy  can read somebody’s characteristics from peoples faces

Pierre Flourens

- Behavioral consequences of brain damage ablation  systematic damage the brain to
observe consequential behavior.
- Conclusion: no localization of psychological characteristics?

Broca and Wernicke

- Bouillaud: aphasia  speech disorder because of brain injury (not taken seriously because
phrenology was rejected)
- Broca: had acces to a patient ‘Tan’  was the only thing he could say, could understand
language though  had damage on the specific point of the brain (motor aphasia)
- Wernicke: other areas of the brain related to different types of aphasia  third type of
aphasia  conduction aphasia (repeat sentence)
- Sensory aphasia (understanding language)




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