General Psychology: Wilhelm Wundt William James
General Psychology: Wilhelm Wundt William James
Roots of Psychology:
Wilhelm Wundt (‘VILL-helm Voont’)
created the first experimental apparatus that measured the time when a ball hit a
platform and time it hit a telegraph key in December of 1879 in Liepzig, Germany
Wundt and his followers would later establish structuralism and explain that sensations
were the key in analyzing the structure of the mind. Thus, sensations and perception
are the elements in the creation of conscious experience (Hergenhahn, 2009).
William James
Later on, this approach (structuralism) was being criticized for being subjective narrow
in terms of how it viewed human experience. That resulted in the emergence of
functionalism, a new approach
He proposed that the mind functions and adapts to the ever changing world. He
argued that mental activities have adaptive functions and have evolved through the
ages (Plotnik & Kouyoumdjian, 2011)
First textbook called Principles of Psychology in 1890
Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Kohler Kurt Kofka
Other scholars who also saw the limitations of structuralism
The structuralists cannot possibly prove that apparent motion was a result of adding all
sensations.
They demonstrated the perception of movement using two bulbs, flashing one after the
other, thus creating a perception of movement though the bulbs were actually fixed.
They further explained that perceptual experiences resulted from the tendency of the
brain to interpret the “whole pattern” or, in German, Gestalt. It emphasized that the
whole is more than the sum of its parts.
John B. Watson
Father of Behaviorism
He rejected introspection as a method of studying your own experiences and insisted
that psychology should be objective and should only study observable behaviors,
including the analysis of how to control and predict those behaviours (Harzem, 2004)
Modern Approaches:
Six (6) modern approaches in psychology