The emergence and development of psychology as a science. The main stages in the development of psychology as a science.


History of the development of psychology as a science

Natalia Vysotskaya

History of the development of psychology as a science

ABSTRACT

Topic: History of the development of psychology as a science

Performed

Vysotskaya Natalya Nikolaevna.

Introduction

The formation of psychology as a science has a long period, but a fairly short history . Since Ancient Greece, attempts have been made to explain mental phenomena . The psyche and soul were considered as an indispensable attribute of nature: everything has a soul, and it, in turn, is the source of movement and development . The soul is a substance independent of the physical body, which influences a person’s destiny, his health, and success. This approach is called animism (from the Latin anima - soul, spirit)

.
Subsequently, ideas about the nature of the psyche were developed by Democritus and Plato . Democritus is the founder of materialistic views on psyche .
URL: https://www.physchem.chimfak.rsu.ru/Source/History/Persones/Demokritos.html

He believed that the soul consists of atoms. He gave an explanation for the phenomenon of causality and showed that there are no uncaused phenomena. Plato, on the contrary, spoke about the primacy of ideas and the secondary nature of the material world. He believed that any knowledge is a process of recollection of the soul. The philosophy of idealism originates from Plato. The great minds of antiquity assumed that there is a connection between the psyche and the brain . They believed that the psyche depends on the environment, and distinguished stable individual signs of the human psyche .

In the Middle Ages, under conditions of total dominance of religion, there was a ban on the study of man. And yet, starting from the 15th century, the development of psychological thought , and it was associated with the blossoming mechanics. Descartes was the first to apply the laws of mechanics to . He compared the work of the body with technical devices. He also believed that the animal is soulless, and its behavior is a reaction to external influences. Descartes introduced the concepts of reflex and consciousness, but “torn apart”

their.
Spinoza made an attempt to overcome Descartes' dualism. He wanted to create a doctrine about man as an integral being. He identified 3 main motives for human activity: attraction, joy, sadness. Based on these motives, various emotional states appear. Locke developed the ideas of sensory sources of knowledge of the world .
His doctrine is called sensationalism, because he argued that there is nothing in the mind that does not pass through the senses. In the 18th century French philosophers Diderot, Holbach, Helvetius, Condillac first put forward ideas about the social determination of the human psyche . These ideas formed the basis of some of the provisions of modern psychology .

At the beginning of the 19th century. New approaches to the psyche . There is a promise for the formation of psychology as a science . Among the prerequisites are the development of the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system. In the second half of the 19th century. knowledge from the fields of biology, physiology, and medicine became the basis for the creation of scientific psychology .

Chapter 1 The period of formation of psychological knowledge within the framework of other scientific disciplines (4th – 5th centuries BC – 60s of the 19th century)

From the perspective of scientific methodology, the history of psychology can be described as a sequence of stages in the formation of ideas about the subject, method and explanatory principles within the framework of scientific paradigms, in the sequence of their emergence, coexistence, competition and change at different stages of the formation of psychology as a single independent scientific discipline.

In the history of psychology there is a period when it was formed in the depths of other scientific disciplines, and a period when it became an independent scientific discipline.

The period of formation of psychology within the framework of other scientific disciplines is characterized by:

1. lack of independence of psychological knowledge . This knowledge was presented as one of the parts of philosophical and medical teachings. At first it was in the form of a doctrine of the soul, then - a philosophical theory of knowledge, doctrines of experience and consciousness;

2. lack of communities that would share common views on the subject and method of study;

3. speculative nature of the research. During this period, there was a complete absence of an experimental approach to research.

This period was preceded by the emergence and development of ideas about the soul within the framework of religious systems and rituals that ensured the unity and existence of primitive societies. Ideas about the soul provided explanations for such phenomena as sleep, dreams, trance states, the effects of prohibitions (taboos, mastery of magical skills, death, etc. A common feature of the primary views on mental phenomena was the invariable endowment of mystery and sacredness to them. Another important characteristic These views - animism - the belief that every object of not only living, but also inanimate nature certainly has a soul and, in addition, souls can exist independently of objects and are special beings.

1.1. The doctrine of the soul (5th century BC - early 17th century AD)

The doctrine of the soul has its basis in ancient Greek philosophy and medicine. Science in Ancient Greece arose due to two circumstances:

1. science is a special field of human activity. It was formed independently of religion and existed separately from it;

2. orderliness of the cosmos (all things)

was considered based not on the power of a super being, but on law. The Greeks highly revered the law, and even the supreme gods were subordinate to it.

New ideas about the soul were not religious and were not based on traditions. These ideas were entirely secular, open to all, and open to rational criticism. The purpose of constructing the doctrine of the soul was to identify the properties and laws of its existence, that is, the doctrine of the soul had a distinct nomothetic character.

Another event that influenced the development of the doctrine of the soul was the transition from spontaneous and irrational animism, according to which all events take place under the influence of the souls of natural objects, to hylozoism, a philosophical doctrine based on the idea of ​​the inseparability of life from matter, of life as a universal property of matter. This doctrine introduced the starting point about the integrity of the observable world. Although this point of view, shared, in particular, by Descartes, leads to panpsychism (the idea of ​​the animation of objects of both living and inanimate nature), hylozoism includes the soul within the scope of natural laws and makes its study accessible. These were the initial conditions for the formation of the doctrine of the soul and its initial provisions.The development of precisely these provisions for a long time determined the history of the formation of psychological knowledge .

The most important directions in the development of ideas about the soul are associated with the teachings of Plato (427 - 347 BC)

and
Aristotle (384 - 322 BC)
.
Plato divided the material mortal body and the immaterial immortal soul. Individual souls are imperfect images of the one universal world soul. Each soul has a portion of the universal spiritual experience which it recalls, and this is the essence of individual cognition. This doctrine laid the foundations of the philosophical theory of knowledge and determined the orientation of psychological knowledge towards solving philosophical, ethical, pedagogical and religious problems.
A fundamentally different idea of ​​the soul was given by Aristotle in his psychological treatise “On the Soul”

. URL:

https://osense.narod.ru/library/philosophy/html/110102_aristot.htm

According to Aristotle , the soul is nothing more than the form of a living organic body. The soul provides purpose. It is the basis of all life manifestations and is inseparable from the body. This situation completely contradicts Plato’s teaching about the infusion of souls at birth and their expiration at death. But both philosophers agree that the soul determines the purpose of the activity of the living body. The concept of a goal, a final cause, was introduced by Aristotle to explain the determinism of the behavior of living organisms. This explanation was teleological, leading to the paradox of the influence of the future on the past, but it made it possible to introduce the activity of living organisms into the circle of explainable phenomena. Aristotle gave one of the earliest formulations of the explanatory principles of psychology - development , determinism, integrity, activity.

Disciple of Plato, follower of Aristotle Theophrastus (372 – 287 BC)

in the treatise
“Characters”
he gave a description of 30 different characters,
developing the Aristotelian idea of ​​​​this property of a person. His work marked the beginning of a separate line in popular psychology , which was continued in the Renaissance by Montaigne, in the Enlightenment by La Bruyère, La Rochefoucauld, then by von Kniege, and in our time by Carnegie.
The successes achieved by ancient philosophers and physicians in the development of the doctrine of the soul served as the foundation for all further developments of psychological knowledge , which at this stage mainly boiled down to expanding the range of phenomena under consideration. In the 3rd – 4th centuries. n. e. in the works of Plotinus (205 – 270, Aurelius Augustine (354 – 430)

and early Christian philosophers and theologians, the inner world of man and the possibilities of self-knowledge are highlighted as the subject of research; for the first time, descriptions of the phenomena of consciousness appear, for example, its focus on the subject, highlighted by Thomas Aquinas
(1226 – 1274)
.

From 5th to 14th centuries. in the works of Boethius (480 – 524, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus (1256 – 1308)

an idea of ​​personality is formed. It is important to note that the powerful influence of Christian theology, the foundations of which included the philosophy of Neoplatonism, gave these works an ethical-theological character, bringing it closer to the line laid down by the teachings of Plato.

The pinnacle and completion of the stage of development of psychological knowledge within the framework of the doctrine of the soul was the system of views of Francis Bacon (1561 - 1626)

.
The study of the soul formed part of a unified science of man , the construction of which Bacon planned. The novelty of Bacon's approach consisted in the rejection of a speculative solution to questions about the nature of the soul and the transition to an empirical study of its characteristics. However, this intention could not be realized, because at that time ideas about neither the general scientific method nor the subject of research had yet been formed. Bacon, in accordance with tradition, separated the science of the body from the science of the soul , and in the doctrine of the soul he singled out the science of the rational divine soul and the irrational soul, feeling, bodily, common to humans and animals. Bacon’s teaching revived the idea of ​​hylozoism: the living also have the ability to choose , and dead bodies (for example, a magnet)
. Important new components of the doctrine of the soul introduced by Bacon are the idea of ​​the role of society and tools in the processes of cognition.

1.2. Philosophical theory of knowledge, doctrines of experience and consciousness (mid-17th century - mid-19th century)

Ideas about the soul changed radically after René Descartes (1596 – 1650)

introduced the concept of
“consciousness”
.
It was considered as a criterion distinguishing between soul and body. Introspection, according to Descartes, is so obvious that it was used by him to provide indisputable proof of the very existence of the subject, formulated in the form of the aphorism “I think, therefore I exist
.
According to the criterion of introspection, only man has a soul, and animals do not have a soul and act like mechanical devices. To explain actual bodily actions in animals and humans, Descartes introduced the idea of ​​a reflex, in which the principle of mechanistic determinism was implemented. The essence of the reflex, according to Descartes, is that external influences through the movement of animal spirits along the nerves lead to the movement of certain muscles, which represents the action of the body. Descartes' teaching formed the basis of new psychological knowledge , since it introduced the ideas of:
- the accessibility of the inner world through introspection;

— about the reflex as a mechanism of behavior;

- about the leading role of the external world in the determination of behavior, as well as its mechanistic interpretation;

— about the psychophysical problem and its dualistic solution.

These innovations for a long time determined the course of development of the philosophical doctrine of cognition, and then served as an important factor in the formation and development of scientific paradigms in psychology .

By the middle of the 17th century. experience was accepted as the subject of the philosophical theory of knowledge. The concept of experience included ideas, sensations, feelings and the results of introspection. At this time, the idea developed and began to dominate that knowledge is based on experience, and we go, which constitute the content of consciousness, appear on the basis of experience. This point of view goes back to sensationalism, a doctrine that developed in antiquity, according to which there is nothing in the mind that was not previously in the feeling. It was the most important role of the idea of ​​experience that determined the name of an entire direction of research within the philosophy of knowledge - empirical psychology . This term, introduced by Christian Wolf (1679 - 1754), emphasized the task of studying specific phenomena of mental life using introspection, in contrast to rational psychology , which dealt with the eternal, unchanging, immortal soul. The doctrine of consciousness was formed within the framework of philosophy, and even using the results natural scientific works, it did not have an experimental character in the modern sense of the word.

The basis of the study of consciousness as in the predecessors of Wolff - Hobbes (1588 – 1679)

and Locke (1632 - 1704, and among the thinkers who
developed this teaching until the second half of the 19th century - Condillac (1715 - 1780, Herbart (1776 - 1841, Lotze (1817 - 1881), there was precisely the method of introspection, they were united by the idea of ​​a special the essence of the phenomena being studied, comprehended exclusively by introspection. Both external and internal experience are accessible only to introspection.
Leibniz (1646 - 1716)

introduced, in addition to the concept of
“perception,”
the term
“apperception
,” interpreting it as
a mental force that determines the purposefulness of actions, their active, conscious, voluntary nature.
Thus, if the Cartesian and Lockean ideas about consciousness exhausted the entire phenomenology of states of mind, then Leibniz was the first to identify a circle of unconscious phenomena inaccessible to introspection. , associative and empirical psychology acted as branches of the philosophical theory of knowledge and therefore could not be in conflict.

It is with the development of empiricism in the philosophical doctrine of knowledge that the emergence of the name of a new discipline is associated - psychology . The emergence of the term " psychology "

It is customary to associate either with the theological works of the Reformation figure Philip Melanchthon (1497 - 1560), or with the designation of a special section of literature introduced in the 16th century by the philosophers Goklenius and Kassmann. Leibniz proposed the term “pneumatology

, but his student Wolf introduced
"
psychology " is widely used .

At the end of the 18th - beginning of the 19th centuries. psychological knowledge begins to go beyond the boundaries of philosophy - into linguistics, ethnography, biology and medicine. Spencer formulated the principle of adaptation of organisms to the environment, Darwin outlined a non-teleological explanation of the purposefulness of behavior, studied instinctive behavior and emotions, showed the evolutionary origin of some forms of human behavior, Galton raised the question of the heredity of psychological characteristics , the English neurologist Jackson successfully studied the patterns of localization and distribution of mental functions provided by various brain structures. Fruitful contact with physiology and anatomy was developed during the development of Descartes' ideas about the reflex. The original speculative idea acquired a specific anatomical and physiological expression in the works of Prochazka, Bell and Magendie as a reflex arc along which nervous excitation spread from the receptor to the effector so that the sensory stimulus caused a motor response. Based on the concept of reflex, Sechenov formulated one of the main programs for transforming psychology into a scientific discipline.

During this period, the most important problem became the development of psychology’s to such general scientific values, which had been formed by that time in the natural sciences, such as methods of experimental research, requirements for its generality, objectivity, and the quantitative nature of knowledge.

Thus, during the period when psychological knowledge was formed in the depths of other sciences , there was a rejection of the pre-scientific concept of the soul as an immaterial, incorporeal substance. Human consciousness and experience began to be studied on the basis of introspection. There was a need to move from philosophical research of the epistemological type to concrete scientific methods. This period can be called pre-paradigm. It is characterized by the following phenomena:

1. a lot of observations have accumulated that were easily accessible to the researcher (through self-observation)

;

2. It was difficult to assess logical contradictions and the degree of importance of observations. As a consequence, any results obtained were considered equally valuable and relevant;

3. scientific paradigms were set by schools in which the authority of the leader (founder)

interrupted the need for strict compliance of results with the basic requirements for scientific knowledge;

4. in the pre-paradigm period, dominant views changed very rarely. Even taking into account the fact that they were no longer viable enough.

During the period of development of psychological knowledge in the depths of other sciences psychologists itself did not exist .

Chapter 2 Psychology as an independent scientific discipline (60s of the 19th century - present.)

In the 60s 19th century in the development of psychological science begins . It is characterized by the following features:

1. new scientific paradigms, institutions and psychological professional communities emerge;

2. within paradigms, ideas about the subject and method of research are formed;

3. the subject and method of psychology with general scientific norms and values;

4. Contacts with other sciences are developing , resulting in the emergence of new paradigms and branches of psychology ;

5. There is a great diversity and competition of paradigms.

The establishment of psychology as an independent scientific discipline is associated with the emergence of the first scientific programs created by Wundt and Sechenov. Wundt's program was oriented towards the general scientific experimental method. But Wundt called introspection the only direct method of psychology , since the subject of psychology is the direct experience of the person himself. The role of experiment is limited only to imparting accuracy and reliability to research results. Wundt's most important role in the establishment of psychology as an independent scientific discipline was that it was he who organized the first specialized institutes of psychological science . In 1879, Wundt founded a scientific laboratory in Leipzig, and in 1881 he founded the scientific journal Philosophical Research.

.
Wundt also established fixed membership in the scientific psychological community Congress of Psychology in Paris in 1889 . Introspection, proposed by Wundt as a method of psychology , was further developed in the paradigm of structural psychology , which was founded by Titchener (1867 - 1927, a successor of Wundt’s ideas in the USA.
By the end of the 19th century, there was an awareness that introspection does not reveal the main aspects of the psyche . And initially because that the range of phenomena studied in psychology is not limited to the phenomena of consciousness, and that introspection can only be applied to a small number of objects corresponding to the subject of psychology .

Significant changes in ideas about the subject and method of psychology were made by Z. Freud (1856 - 1939, who founded the paradigm of psychoanalysis . Before psychoanalysis turned into a version of popular psychology , it was aimed at the study of personality and was built in accordance with principles such as the principle of determinism, the principle of development , the principle of activity, the source of which , according to According to Freud's teaching, lies within the subject.Psychoanalysis abandoned introspection as a research method.

The most serious revolution in ideas about the subject and method of psychology was made by Watson (1878 - 1958)

.
The date of birth of behaviorism is considered to be the publication in 1913 of the article
Psychology from the point of view of a behaviorist .
According to this direction, psychology is an objective experimental branch of the natural sciences . The subject of psychology is behavior, which is understood as a set of observable muscular and glandular reactions to external stimuli.
The research method is behavioral experiment. In the period from 1910 to 1930s. In psychology , many competing incompatible and even incomparable paradigms have emerged. This was a unique situation in the history of science . No other discipline has seen so many different paradigms collide. Here is an incomplete list of the actual psychological paradigms that were formed during the open crisis: behaviorism; Tolman's cognitive behaviorism; psychoanalysis ; the teachings of Freud, Jung, Adler; Gestalt psychology ; dynamic psychology ; descriptive psychology of Dilthey and Spranger ; genetic psychology ; cultural-historical theory of Vygotsky ; various versions of activity theory: Basov, Rubinstein; reactology in the versions of Kornilov and Bekhterev; psychology of attitude Uznadze . The state of psychology in 1910–1930s . represented a stage of open crisis. This period continues to the present day, characterized by diversity and competition of paradigms. Thanks to many competing paradigms, we have the most complete understanding of the subject and method in psychology . In order to get out of the crisis productively, it is necessary for the psychological community to develop a common opinion about the basic scientific values, principles, subject and method of psychology .

Conclusion

The structure of modern psychology represents all stages of its formation. The strict requirements of research practice, as well as intra- and inter-paradigm criticism lead to the transformation of borrowed principles and concepts. Competition and interrelationships between paradigms in psychology lead to its intensive development . We can highlight some main directions of development of psychological science :

1. development of already existing paradigms. For example, psychosemantics . The subject of her research is the genesis, structure and functioning of the system of meanings in the individual consciousness. It uses modern techniques and does not need the method of introspection;

2. emergence of new paradigms. For example, in the 1950s - 1960s. psychology appeared . The subject of its study is the holistic personality of a person;

3. the formation of different versions of explanatory principles, ideas about the subject and method of psychology . In the 1960s - 1980s. Based on the principle of integrity, the principle of consistency was formulated. Different paradigms explore different aspects of this principle;

4. the emergence of new explanatory principles. For example, the principle of subjectivity most fully outlines the subject and method of psychology , and now it is going through a stage of intensive development ;

5. expansion of the most developed paradigms to other branches of psychology . For example, the scope of research in cognitive psychology . This direction began to develop in the 1950s . in opposition to the dominance of behaviorism;

6. development of connections between psychology and other sciences . This process leads to the emergence of new branches of psychology . Thus, in contact between psychology and linguistics, psycholinguistics , with neurology, neurophysiology and psychophysiology - neuropsychology , with population genetics - genetic psychophysiology .

Psychology in the 19th – early 20th centuries

The founder of the direction of positivism in science, O. Comte, did not find a place for psychology in his classification of sciences, as it does not have a positive (that is, scientific) paradigm. Thus, psychology was faced with a choice: either losing the status of an independent discipline, merging with biology and sociology, or transforming in the spirit of positivism. The primary requirement was the development of a methodology, since introspection could not be considered truly scientific. The method of logic (J. Mill), the trial and error method (A. Bain), the method of genetic observation (I. Sechenov), and the experimental method (W. Wundt) appear.

The emergence of Darwin's theory of evolution entailed the final rejection of mechanistic determinism and the acceptance of the idea that the goal of mental development is adaptation to the environment. It became possible to develop a number of branches of psychology - differential, genetic, zoopsychology.

The discoveries of G. Helmholtz laid the foundation for the development of psychophysiology. The dead-end branch of physiology turned out to be phrenology - the theory (formulated by F. Gall) that the development of individual areas of the cerebral cortex affects the shape of the skull, causing the appearance of “bumps”. However, testing and refutation of this theory stimulated the development of experimental psychology. Psychophysics (founder – G. Fechner), which serves to measure sensations (the concept of “sensation threshold” appears), and psychometry (founder – F. Donders), which measures the speed of mental processes, also developed. In 1879, in Leipzig, W. Wundt opened the first laboratory of experimental psychology. Experimental study of memory at the turn of the 19th – 20th centuries. studied by G. Ebbinghaus.

At the end of the 19th – beginning of the 20th centuries. Psychology already included a number of schools, whose representatives interpreted its subject, tasks, and methods differently. These were structuralism (E. Titchener), functionalism (F. Brentano, C. Stumpf), Würzburg (O. Külpe, N. Ach) and French (T. Ribot, E. Durkheim) schools, descriptive psychology (V. Dilthey, E. Strangler). In particular, the work of functionalists proved that the psyche is a dynamic stream of consciousness. Scientists from the Würzburg School were the first to begin the experimental study of thinking. V. Dilthey developed an approach that was later called “psychologism.” He proposed not to explain the psyche, but to understand and comprehend it.

Subject of study

The subject of psychology has changed along with the development of this discipline , constantly expanding and supplementing.

At first it was the science of the soul ; this explained everything that was incomprehensible to man and that could not be rationally explained.

But the formation of a scientific direction is connected precisely with the term “consciousness”. This definition was studied and interpreted by various researchers, for example, J. Locke believed that this is the very first thing a person discovers in himself.

So, the subject of research of this phenomenon was considered by many scientists. At the end of the 19th century, experiments began to be actively carried out. The most significant of them were the experiments of W. Wundt, whom we already mentioned above.

Psyche, psychophysiology and psychodiagnostics

Concepts such as “psyche” and “consciousness” are closely related. Let's try to understand this issue.

So, if we consider the definition of the psyche in its broad sense, as the space of the inner world of a person, then, in this case, consciousness should be characterized as the highest form of the psyche , that is, as all the phenomena that a person is aware of and of which he is aware.

But quite often these definitions are interpreted in a narrower sense. Then the psyche is more likely directed towards the external world, and consciousness towards the internal.

As a psychophysiological phenomenon, it is one of the most complex manifestations of brain functioning.

Self-awareness occupies an important place in the structure of the discipline . As we noted earlier, this is a process during which the subject becomes able to determine the attitude towards himself and know himself.

Psychodiagnostics of self-awareness is aimed at identifying its product of the subject’s idea of ​​himself. In this case, you can use the following psychodiagnostic methods :

  1. Self-report is performed in the form of descriptions of one’s feelings and emotions.
  2. Checklists , lists of qualities are offered and from them a person needs to choose those that are most suitable for him.
  3. Questionnaires include various statements about the subject’s attitude towards himself in various areas of life. He needs to determine how much he agrees with them in accordance with the scale developed for the questionnaire.
  4. Free self-descriptions imply subsequent analysis and processing.

What is the unconscious according to Freud? Find out the answer right now.

Property of highly organized matter

Many researchers agree that consciousness can be characterized as a product or property of highly organized matter , that is, a person. The nature and essence of the connection between a property and matter itself is being actively studied in various disciplines.

At the same time, it is quite often characterized as a property of the brain. But this definition is wrong. The fact is that the brain is primarily a biological organ.

Consciousness is formed under the influence of social factors. Therefore, it is more correct to define it as a property of such highly organized matter as a person.

Study problem

In the structure of scientific knowledge, this concept and its research are distinguished by several significant difficulties that arise for researchers. This is especially true for direct study of its nature.

The main problems of this concept include:

  • unlike other mental functions, it is not localized in time and space. As a result, certain difficulties arise in its research in certain areas of science,
  • psychological phenomena appear in a person immediately at the moment when he begins to realize them.

In addition, it should be noted that the term itself did not have a clear description and definition .

It was the difference between conscious mental processes and unconscious ones.

In other words, this was the name given to a certain coloring that accompanies most mental acts .

Only after a large amount of time the organization of this mental act was changed and supplemented. So, now this included such components as an object and a sign, included in the structure of this concept.

Thus, despite the problems of consciousness, it is still considered to be the highest level of understanding of mental processes and self-regulation that a person has.

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