1 / 24

Early Notions about Learning

Ninth Edition. 3. Early Notions about Learning. Epistomology: The Nature of Knowledge. Plato (ca. 427—347 B.C.) Predominantly a nativist. Knowledge is innate–inherited. Aristotle (384—322 B.C.) Predominantly an empiricist. Knowledge comes from sensory experience. Plato.

alvarados
Download Presentation

Early Notions about Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ninth Edition 3 Early Notions about Learning

  2. Epistomology:The Nature of Knowledge • Plato (ca. 427—347 B.C.) • Predominantly a nativist. • Knowledge is innate–inherited. • Aristotle (384—322 B.C.) • Predominantly an empiricist. • Knowledge comes from sensory experience.

  3. Plato • Reminiscence Theory of Knowledge • Knowledge is “recollection of the experience our soul had in the “heaven which is beyond the heavens.” • Sensory information can deceive. Use reason to remember what you already know.

  4. Aristotle • Knowledge gained from senses and reason • Laws of Association • Similarity • Contrast • Contiguity • Frequency (later)

  5. Law of Contiguity

  6. Beginnings of Modern Psychology • Rene DesCartes • Suggested that the Mind and Body (including brain) were separate entities. • Introduced the reflex action. • Relied on innate ideas. • (space, time, motion, god, self)

  7. Thomas Hobbes • Opposed the notion of innate ideas. • Doctrine of Hedonism • Avoiding Pain; Seeking Pleasure. • Saw humans as selfish and aggressive. • Society as a safe compromise.

  8. John Locke • Tabula Rasa • “There is nothing in the mind that is not first in the senses.” • “There is nothing in the mind that is not first in the senses, except the mind itself.”

  9. David Hume (1711—1776) • We can be sure of nothing. • Mind, for Hume, was no more than a stream of ideas, memories, imaginings, associations, and feelings. • Subjective experience was the only thing we ever encountered directly.

  10. Immanuel Kant (1724—1804) • Careful analysis reveals categories of thought. • Twelve innate faculties including unity, totality, reality, existence, necessity, reciprocity, and causality. • Great influence on Gestalt and Cognitive Psychology.

  11. John Stuart Mill • Simple ideas combine into a new totality that may bear little resemblance to its parts. • The whole is different from the sum of its parts. • The foundation of Gestalt Psychology.

  12. Thomas Reid • Faculty Psychology • Hypothesized twenty-seven faculties of the mind, most of which were thought to be innate.

  13. Franz Joseph Gall (1758—1828)

  14. Charles Darwin (1809—1882) • Wished to have his research published only after his death. • We are biologically related to the “lower” animals. • Experimental approach could be applied to the study of humans.

  15. Hermann Ebbinghaus(1850—1909)

  16. Ebbinghaus • Emancipated psychology from philosophy. • Forgetting is very fast for the first few hours following a learning experience and very slow thereafter. • Psychology’s first “learning curve.”

  17. Psychology’s Early Schools • Voluntarism: Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt (1832—1920)

  18. Wundt and Voluntarism • Psychology’s first experimental laboratory. • The important aspects of mind could be studied only indirectly by studying religion, morals, myths, art, social customs, language, and law. • Saw Experimental Psychology as limited.

  19. Edward Titchener (1867—1927) and Structuralism • Analyzed elements of thought using introspection. • A search for the basic elements of thought. • Most important thing about structuralism was that it appeared, it was tried, and it failed.

  20. Functionalism—Adjusting to the Environment • William James

  21. Functionalism • Influenced by Darwin’s doctrine of evolution. • Studied the relationship of consciousness to the environment. • Information that could be used to improve the human condition.

  22. John B. Watson (1878—1958)

  23. John B. Watson (1878—1958) • Founder of Behaviorism • No more introspection, no more talk of instinctive behavior, and no study of the human conscious or unconscious mind. • Behavior is what we can see, and therefore behavior is what we study.

  24. Watson’s Contributions • Changed psychology’s goal from attempting to understand consciousness to the prediction and control of behavior. • He made behavior psychology’s subject matter. • Ever since Watson, essentially all psychologists study behavior.

More Related