Reductionism vs Holism

Cards (13)

  • Reductionism involves reducing behaviour from a higher level of explanation to a lower one whilst still fully explaining the behaviour
  • The socio-cultural level of explanation is the belief that behaviour can be explained by understanding things that occur in our social environment, as well as cultural influences
  • The psychological level of explanation is the belief that behaviour can be explained in terms of our mental processes and attitudes towards past experiences
  • The cognitive level of explanation is the belief that behaviour can be explained by understanding how individuals process information
  • The behavioural level of explanation is the belief that behaviour can be explained with reference to learning processes like reinforcement and punishment
  • The biological and evolutionary level of explanation is the belief that behaviour can be explained in terms of biology
  • The holist argues that there may be different levels of explanation, but that behaviour can’t be perfectly reduced to any single one of them
  • Biological reductionism is need on the idea that all behaviour has its root in biological and therefore can be fully explained at the biological level of explanation
  • Environmental reductionism simplifies behaviour into a stimulus-response action
  • Holism argues that simple components aren’t fully able to explain behaviours, and theories should focus on the whole system rather than component parts
  • Holists don’t deny the influence of genes or biology but feel that human behaviour is more complicated
  • Interactionism is the view that several levels of explanation are necessary to explain behaviour
  • Interactionists would argue that each level has relevance in certain situations and it’s not clear which has the best explanatory power