Roots of Psychology

Lecture 1: Roots of Psychology

🧠 What is Psychology?

  • Etymology:
  • Psyche = soul (Greek)
  • Logos = rational study
  • → Psychology = “The rational study of the soul”
  • Modern psychology = study of human behavior, perception, memory, relationships, cognition, and emotion
  • Psychology is not about weighing souls; it’s about understanding the human condition

🏛️ Ancient Roots of Psychology

Plato’s Allegory of the Cave

  • People chained in a cave watch shadows on a wall, believing them to be reality
  • One escapes, discovers light, sun, grass, and true world
  • Returns to tell the others—gets rejected as insane
  • Key takeaways:
  • Our perception is limited and filtered
  • Truth is difficult and socially risky
  • Personal growth = seeing beyond illusion
  • Captures: development, social conformity, awakening

Plato’s Allegory of the Chariot

  • Charioteer pulled by two horses:
  • One noble (aspiration)
  • One base/slovenly (desire)
  • Represents motivational conflict
  • Later mirrored in Freud’s ego/id and Jung’s shadow
  • Life = internal conflict, tug-of-war between higher/lower nature

Heraclitus

  • “You can’t step in the same river twice”
  • The world and self are constantly changing
  • The self is a dynamic process, not a fixed object

🏥 Early Medical Models

  • Humors: Ancient Greek medicine linked mood to body fluids (e.g. black bile = melancholia = depression)
  • Foundations for later theories of mental illness

🔁 Renaissance Thought

  • Descartes:
  • Cogito ergo sum — “I think, therefore I am”
  • Introduced mind-body dualism
    • Mind ≠ body (a view still influencing psychology)
  • Suggested humans have souls, unlike animals
  • Literature also played a role:
  • Freud and others read Shakespeare, Goethe, Mary Shelley
  • e.g. Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” → Oedipal tension

🧪 Founders of Modern Psychology

Wilhelm Wundt

  • German physiologist
  • Founded the first psychology lab
  • Focus: structuralism — breaking down mental processes into components
  • Collaborated with:
  • Fechner: just noticeable difference
  • Helmholtz: perception

William James

  • American philosopher/psychologist
  • Founder of functionalism
  • Emphasis on purpose/adaptation of mental processes
  • Interested in:
  • Habit (inspired by frog reflexes)
  • Religious experience, mysticism (via nitrous oxide)
  • Ghosts (seriously)
  • Wrote The Varieties of Religious Experience

Sigmund Freud

  • Physician and neurologist
  • Founder of psychoanalysis
  • Key ideas:
  • Talking cure (via patient Anna O)
  • Unconscious mind
  • Drives: Eros (life) vs Thanatos (death)
  • Influenced by Schopenhauer & Nietzsche

Ivan Pavlov

  • Russian physiologist
  • Classical conditioning
  • Bell + food → dog salivates
  • Foundation for behaviorism

📈 20th Century Psychology

Behaviorism

  • John Watson
  • Famous Little Albert experiment (fear conditioning)
  • Left academia → advertising
  • B.F. Skinner
  • Operant conditioning (Skinner box)
    • Behavior shaped by reinforcement schedules
  • Wrote Walden Two (utopian behavioral society)

Attitudes & Measurement

  • L.L. Thurstone
  • Measured attitudes using scales
  • Laid foundation for modern surveys & evaluations

Social Psychology

  • Kurt Lewin
  • Democratic vs authoritarian vs laissez-faire leadership
  • Founded group behavior studies, especially post-WWII

Humanism

  • Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers
  • Hierarchy of needs, self-actualization
  • Roots of modern therapy and self-help

Cognitive Revolution (1960s–80s)

  • Mind as an information processor
  • Influenced by rise of computers
  • Topics: memory, perception, decision-making

Neuroscience Boom (1990s+)

  • Neuroimaging (fMRI, MEG, EEG)
  • ‘Decade of the Brain’ → massive funding
  • Mapping brain functions + linking to behavior

🧬 Psychology Today: Multi-Level Analysis

To study something like depression, psychologists might look at:

  • Molecular level: neurotransmitters (e.g. serotonin)
  • Genetics: hereditary patterns
  • Brain structure/function: fMRI, white matter, etc.
  • Physiology: vagus nerve, heart rate, etc.
  • Cognition: thought patterns, biases
  • Self & identity: self-esteem, personality traits
  • Relationships: romantic/family/friend dynamics
  • Group dynamics: workplace, teams
  • Cultural influences: societal norms
  • Environment: light exposure (e.g. SAD)
  • Spiritual/metaphysical levels (e.g. Jung’s collective unconscious)

🔬 What Makes Psychology a Science?

  • Use of the scientific method
  • Define clear constructs (e.g. happiness, ego threat)
  • Develop measurements (surveys, lab procedures)
  • Seek:
  • Correlation (what goes with what)
  • Causation (experiments: manipulation & control)
  • Mechanisms (why something happens)
  • Moderators (what changes the effect)

🧭 Fields in Psychology

  • Experimental Psychology (lab-based)
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Personality Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Industrial/Organizational Psychology
  • Behavioral Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Neuroscience

🎯 Two Types of Psychology

  • Outside Psychology: understanding & controlling behavior (e.g. Skinner)
  • Inside Psychology: self-growth, self-discovery, healing (e.g. Rogers, Maslow)

🧍 About the Lecturer

  • Background: Freudian, philosophical roots → science
  • Studied:
  • Narcissism, ego threat, self-enhancement
  • Shamanic medicine, psychedelics, wealth science
  • Collaborated with:
  • Jean Twenge (generational change)
  • Josh Miller (clinical psychology)

🧠 Final Encouragement

  • Don’t be intimidated by psychology or science
  • Use Google Scholar:
  • Search “[topic] + review paper” or “meta-analysis”
  • Read primary sources—don’t rely solely on interpreters
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