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Summary of all the deep understanding questions

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Summary of all Deep Understanding Questions for the course History of Psychology. Each question from all 10 lectures will be covered.

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Lecture 1:

What are the five reasons to study the history of psychology?
1. Understanding origins - Provides insight into how psychological theories and methods
originated.
2. Developing critical thinking - Helps critically assess hypes and scientific trends.
3. Recognizing reflexivity - Psychology influences and is influenced by society.
4. Learning from past mistakes - Prevents repeating mistakes and shows how "mistakes"
sometimes lead to new insights.
5. Identifying future trends - Old ideas may become relevant again (e.g., aphantasia).



What are the sources of information for the history of psychology?
Primary sources: Original documents, books, lab notes, letters and research equipment.

Secondary sources: History books, scholarly articles and biographies.

Usage by historians: Critical analysis and contextualization to understand connections and
impact.



What's the distinction between the two meanings of "history"?
- History as the past - Everything that happened, regardless of how it is described.

- History as a narrative - Historians' interpretation and reconstruction of the past.

→ Important: History changes with new discoveries and perspectives.



What are the characteristics of traditional versus new/critical histories of
psychology?
Aspect Traditional History (pre-1980) New/Critical History (post-1980)

Focus Internal scientific progress Social, political and cultural context

Presentistic (progress as a linear
Perspective Historism (looks at time context)
process)

Key figures "Great Men" such as Wundt and Freud Attention to women and minorities

Geographic Focus on Europe and U.S. Global perspective

Nonlinear, including failures and forgotten
Science view Linear progress
ideas

, What's the difference between the quasi-linear progress and complex
branching tree/forest evolution of psychology?
- Quasi-linear progress

→ Science develops as a succession of improvements, correcting old mistakes.

→ Example: From introspection → behaviorism → cognitive psychology.

- Complex branching tree/forest evolution

→ Psychology grows as a network of currents, with some disappearing and returning later.

→ Example: Psychoanalysis was never completely replaced, but remained influential
alongside behaviorism and cognitive psychology.

→ Important: Modern historiography more often opts for the "forest" model because science
proceeds chaotically and multidimensionally.




Lecture 2

What factors enabled the emergence of the modern self?
1. Protestant Reformation - Emphasized self-reflection and individual faith, requiring people to make
their own moral choices.

2. New technologies - Mirrors gave people a visual self-image, diaries promoted introspection, and
the printing press made self-development more accessible through books.

3. Capitalism - Created a society in which self-regulation and discipline were crucial for success in
work and finance.

4. Changes in family structure - More privacy within the nuclear family allowed individuals more
space to develop their own identity.

5. Physiognomy & phrenology - Gave a "scientific" basis to the idea that one's inner characteristics
were visible in outer forms, contributing to a growing self-awareness.




Can you explain what is a technology of self-expression and a technology
of self-perception and provide an example for each?
- Technology of self-expression: Means by which individuals can express their thoughts, feelings and
identity.

, → Example: Diaries and letters - Enabled people to express their emotions and form their
identity through reflection.

- Technology of self-perception: Means by which individuals can observe and assess themselves.

→ Example: The mirror - Revolutionized how people saw themselves and how they could
consciously control their appearance and presentation.



How does capitalism impact self-regulation?
- Discipline and efficiency - To survive in a competitive market, individuals had to learn to manage
themselves, plan and be productive.

- Self-monitoring - Work performance was measured, assessed and compared, making people more
aware of their behavior.

- Capitalist values - Success was linked to hard work, self-improvement and economic achievement.

- Free market as metaphor for behavior - Just as the economy regulates itself through supply and
demand, individuals had to regulate their own emotions and behavior to remain successful.



What changes in family life generated or reflected a new need for privacy?
- Emergence of the nuclear family - Instead of extended families living together, families became
smaller and more individual.

- New home architecture - Homes were given separate bedrooms and bathrooms, which allowed for
physical privacy.

- Marriage based on love - Instead of purely economic marriages, personal emotional connection
became more important, leading to a greater need for intimacy.

- Urbanization - In cities, people had less social control from neighbors and communities, which
offered more autonomy in private life.



What is physiognomy?
- The doctrine that a person's appearance, especially facial features, reveals something about
personality and character.

- Popular in the 18th and 19th centuries, especially by Johann Kaspar Lavater, who claimed that moral
and intellectual traits could be read from facial structures.

- Applied in jurisprudence, criminology and personnel selection, but often in a discriminatory way.

- Scientifically untenable - Later research showed that appearance is not a reliable predictor of a
person's character or intelligence.

, What is phrenology? Why did it claim to be "scientific"? Who invented it?
- The theory that the shape and bumps of the skull reflect mental traits and personality.

- Franz Joseph Gall introduced it in the late 18th century and claimed that different brain regions
were responsible for specific traits.

- Scientific image - Based on skull measurements and brain localization, which seemed like an exact
science.

- Later discredited - No evidence that skull shape says anything about intelligence or character, but it
influenced early neuroscience.



Why is Descartes's work important for psychology?
- Introduced the mind-body problem - How can an immaterial mind and a material body interact?

- Laid the foundation for dualism - He held that the mind (res cogitans) and the body (res extensa)
were separate.

- Mechanistic model of the body - Viewed the body as a machine, which influenced physiological
psychology.

- Encourage rationalism - His ideas on knowledge and introspection influenced cognitive psychology
and philosophy of mind.



What is naturalism?
- The view that everything in reality can be explained by natural causes and laws, without
supernatural influences.

- Rejects the idea that consciousness and mental processes are divine or spiritual.

- Laid the foundation for psychology as an empirical science.



In what sense was Descartes' version of naturalism "incomplete"?
- Body is explained mechanically, but mind remains immaterial and unexplained.

- Dualism creates a problem: How does an immaterial mind affect a material body?

- Modern neuroscience rejects this distinction and seeks entirely physical explanations.



What was Descartes' error? Why was it a productive error?
- Wrong: The mind influences the body through the pineal gland, without a clear physical
explanation.

- Productive:

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