chapter 9 - early approaches to psychology Flashcards
1
Q
what are wundt’s ideas about perception? how do these ideas relate to empiricism and rationalism?
A
- it is passive; automatically receiving and encoding sensation (bottom-up)
- perception is a passive process governed by the physical stimulation present, the anatomical makeup, and past experiences (empiricism)
- apperception is active and voluntary (rationalism)
2
Q
how would wundt describe the causes of human behavior and thought?
A
- psychological experiences are tied to physiological experiences, and could be studied more objectively
- willpower can organize the mind’s content into higher-level thought processes
3
Q
how does structuralism connect to the work of the british empiricists?
A
- consciousness being built from the mental elements, thinking the mind is entirely passive (empiricism)
- use of the laws of association
- reduces complex mental states to the simplest processes
- relates to reductionist natures of empiricism
4
Q
how is structuralism a good example of the potential limits of paradigms?
A
- structuralism was purely based on introspection and the three mental elements (sensation, images, affections)
- due to that, the paradigm is very limited and narrow (not good)
- we do not have access to the elements of consciousness just from thinking about it (we cannot see the steps of the thinking process, like pixels forming into vision)
5
Q
how would titchener describe the causes of human behavior and thought?
A
- the what, how, and why of mental processes
- what: the three mental elements (sensations, images, affections)
- how: the ways the elements combine
- why: determining the neurological correlations of mental events