origins of psychology

Cards (6)

  • in order for psychology to be considered a science, it had to adopt the scientific method. became a science in the 19th cent.
  • Wundt
    -first person to call himself a psychologist
    -believed all aspects of nature could be studied scientifically
    -had first psychology lab where he studied only the parts of behaviour that could be strictly controlled under experimental conditions
    -his aim was to study structure of the mind and his method included breaking down behaviours e.g. sensation into their basic elements
  • introspection
    the process of gaining knowledge about ones own mental and emotional states. ability to observe our inner world
  • Wundt's introspection theory:
    he believed that mental processes (perception and memory) could be observed systematically as they occurred using introspection
    E.G. he presented participants with a controlled stimuli (visual images or audio) and asked them about their inner processes they experienced as they looked/listened. he compered the participant's reports to establish theories about perception
  • emergence of psychology as a science
    the reliance on empiricism helped psychology emerge. EMPIRICISM is that knowledge comes from observation and experience alone, its not innate
    this new scientific approach was based on 2 major assumptions:
    1. all behaviour is CAUSED (determinism)
    2. if behaviour is determined, it should be possible to PREDICT how humans would behave in certain conditions (predictability)
  • scientific methods in psychology
    • use of investigative methods that are objective, systematic and replicable.
    • objective that researchers don't allow preconceived ideas to influence their data and systematic in that experiments are carried out in an orderly way.
    • measurement and recording of empirical data are carried out accurately with due concentration for possible influence of other factors
    • if results aren't replicable, then they aren't reliable and cannot be seen as universally true
    • constant testing and refining of these theories through further observation completes the scientific cycle