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Summary Psychology Law in Society

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Summary of the course Pscychology of the bachelor law in society at the VU. I got an 8.4 with this summary!

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Summarized whole book?
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Which chapters are summarized?
Chapters 1, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 13
Uploaded on
February 28, 2025
Number of pages
58
Written in
2024/2025
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Summary
Learning outcomes course manual
Lecture 1
Lecture 2
Lecture 3
Lecture 4
Lecture 5
Lecture 6
Seminar notes
Seminar 2
Seminar 4
Seminar 5
Seminar 6
Seminar 7
Nudge
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Loftus
Philipot et al.
Henrich et al. 1-4



Learning outcomes course manual
(A) Subject-specific learning outcomes Upon completion of the course, students:

Have basic knowledge of the main theoretical frameworks and important debates within psychology.

Have basic knowledge of the main topics studied within psychology, especially within social psychology and
cross-cultural psychology.

(B) Academic learning outcomes

Upon completion of the course, students should be able to:

Understand at a basic level how knowledge of psychology can contribute to the study of a specific societal
problem.

Understand the relevance of psychology for the study of law.

Understand the importance of social and cultural context for the study of law.

(C) Social and communication learning outcomes

Have gained insight into the influence of external factors on human attitudes and behavior.

Be able to reflect on their own perspective of themselves and others.

Have gained insight into cross-cultural differences in basic psychological processes.

Be able to explain psychological concepts in a straightforward manner, and apply them to or support them by
relevant experiments or studies.


Lecture 1
Learning outcomes lecture 1
Define psychology




Summary 1

, Psychology is the science of behavior and the mind.

behavior refers to the observable actions of a person or an animal.

Mind refers to an individual’s sensations, perceptions, memories, thoughts, dreams, motives, emotions, and
other subjective experiences.

It also refers to all of the unconscious knowledge and operating rules that are built into or stored in the brain and
that provide the foundation for organizing behavior and conscious experience.

Science refers to all attempts to answer questions through the systematic collection and logical analysis of
objectively observable data.

Most of the data in psychology are based on observations of behavior, because behavior is directly
observable and mind is not; but psychologists often use those data to make inferences about the mind.

Also an applied discipline—one of the “helping professions.”

Describe the most famous psychologists.

Franz Joseph Gall (around 1800

phrenology; all aspects of thought, emotion, and personality can be located in the brain,

Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1912)

the first person ever to call himself a psychologist

father of experimental psychology

Lombroso

founder of criminology

Founder of criminology

Criminal Man (1876)

Small skull

Deep-set eyes

Low forehead

Merging eyebrows

pseudo-science

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

Freudian psychoanalysis

all people have unconscious thoughts, memories, emotions, and desires and that therapy should be
used to access the mind's repressed feelings and experiences.

Based on ideas, not systematic observation

No attempt at falsification

Jean Piaget (1896-1980)

child development

Burrhus Skinner (1904-1990)

operant conditioning

positive reinforcement → give something they want

n r → something they don’t want is taken away




Summary 2

, p punishment → give something they don’xft want

n p → take away something they want

Albert Bandura (1925-2021)

social learning

Elizabeth Loftus (1944-present)

car accident study

difference in saying smashed into each other or hit each other

TED talk → man said to be rapist but was not → let out → turned insane → died of stress heart attack after
losing everything

Explain three fundamental ideas for psychology.

Body vs. mind

Dualism (Descartes, 17th century)

Body and mind separate entities

Body and soul communicate through the pineal gland

Materialism (Hobbes, 17th century)

Soul does not exist. There is no distinction between body and soul

Psychological research (19th century

Reflexes (week 3

Localization of functions in the brain

Phrenology

Franz Joseph Gall (around 1800

All functions can be localized

27 “organs” in the brain

→ confirmed → different functions in different areas of brain → explain different behaviors

By feeling bumps on the skull you can infer psychological characteristics

“bump” psychology

→ pseudo-science = claiming it is science but not based on any facts

Lombroso

Founder of criminology

Criminal Man (1876)

Small skull

Deep-set eyes

Low forehead

Merging eyebrows

pseudo-science

Lombroso-test

Decide for each photo whether it depicts a writer or a criminal




Summary 3

, Language functions in the brain

Broca’s area (1861): language production

Damage → expressive aphasia

Understand what things mean but cannot form sentences anymore

Wernicke’s area (1881): language comprehension

Damage → receptive aphasia

Can make fully grammatically correct sentences but have no comprehension of what
you or other people are saying




Shaped by experience

Tabula Rasa (Locke, 17th century)

clean slate → ongeschreven blad, individuals being born empty of any built-in mental content

Possible answers to which functions are “built in” → perceive, interpret, encode, recall, store

Possible answers to which functions are learned → walk, read, talk, write, empathize

Natural selection

Evolution (Darwin, 19th century)

All behaviour is aimed toward survival and reproduction

Not just biology

Time of the month

Men find women more attractive when they are ovulating

Lap-dancing study

Strippers kept a journal of tips they made per hour and what their time of the month was

That’s when women can make babies → reproduce

Opposites attract

Human pick mates with different immune system

Produces healthier offspring → best of both worlds

T-shirt sniff study

Women preferred odours of men with different immune system

Reversed when women were on the pill
Explain how psychology relates to other scholarly fields.




Summary 4
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