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Summary 2.3 Problem 8

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Summary for problem 8 for Block 2.3

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Problem 1

Pre- discussion:

Determinism: everything that occurs is based on laws of nature. Everything is predetermined
based on what has already happened, which means that if you gather enough information, you
can predict outcomes based on previous information

Dualism: there is another reality we cannot see, in addition to the reality we witness

Empiricism: knowledge is based on perception, the senses and experimentation. Hard-core
empiricists don’t even think cognitive processing is necessary for acquiring knowledge. Other
empiricists think cognitive processing can help in the acquisition of knowledge

Monism: there is only one form of existence, either material or ideal

Idealism: the truth consists of ideas, and is not a physical thing. Therefore, an idealist is also a
monist

Materialism: everything is matter, even psychological processes. Therefore, a materialist is also a
reductionist

Nativism: true knowledge is innate, present upon birth

Rationalism: Knowledge happens through logical, mental operations. According to real hard-core
rationalists, perception is unnecessary (Plato). According to other rationalists, knowledge is
acquired through reasoning about sensory perception/perceptual observation (Aristotle)

Thorne & Henley & Hergenhahn

Recurring issues in history:
1. Mind-body problem:
 Some say people have both a body and a mind, some say there is only one body
and one mind
 If there is both a body and mind, are they connected or separate?
 The body is mortal, so a belief in immortality requires a soul (mind)
 2 solutions to this problem: monism & dualism

o Monism:
 Assumes only 1 underlying reality, either mind or body, but not both
 The major forms of monism are:
 Materialism: assumes that the only underlying reality is physical, there is
only body
 E.g. Democritus: claims all and thought and action can be reduced to
the electrochemical activity of the brain
 Mentalism/Idealism (immaterialism, subjective idealism): assumes that
reality exists in mind, in the absence of a perceiving mind the physical world
is irrelevant, ideas are the ultimate reality

, o Dualism:
 Assumes that both body and mind exist
 The major forms of dualism are
 Interactionism: assumes that mind and body are separate but they interact,
mind can influence body and vice versa
 An example supporter of this is Descartes
 Parallelism (psychophysical parallelism): assumes that mind and body are
separate entities that don’t interact, they are like two clocks that started
simultaneously that always have the same time even though they have no
effect on each other

o Double Aspectism: a third solution
 Assumes that mind and body are just 2 aspects of the same things, like the observe
and reverse of a coin
 They exist simultaneously, they are inseparable without interacting
 Proposed by Spinoza

o Epiphenomenalism: a 4th position to mind-body problem, closely related to materialism,
assumes that the brain’s activity produces mind as a sort of by-product, the mind doesn’t
influence the brain or behavior

2. Reductionism vs non-reductionism:
 Reductionism: looks for increasingly more basic explanations of psychological
phenomena
 Non-reductionism: asserts that psychological phenomena should stand on their
own, without the need for biological or biochemical explanations

3. The nature vs nurture controversy:
 Nurturists: argue for the learning side
 Nativists: fundamental elements seem innate, but they accept that much of
behavior is learned

PLATO (428-327 B.C.):
Nativist, idealist (monist), rationalist (relied on deductive reasoning: reasoning from a general
principle to a particular)
 He founded the Academy where philosophy and mathematics were taught, the Academy
survived 900 years
 His writings consist of 30 dialogues categorized as early, middle and late

o Theory of Forms:
 Everything in the empirical world is a manifestation of a pure Form (idea) that exists
in the abstract
 There were 2 worlds according to Plato: a world Knowledge and a world of Opinion
1. The world of Knowledge contains the Forms or Ideas which are universals known
only through reason
2. The world of Opinion, contains the changing particulars of the material world
conveyed to us by our senses
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