I. Vocabulary notes: definition, experience, psychoanalysis, observable

study - (зд.) учение
definition - определение
term - термин
to belong to - принадлежать
separate - отдельный
founding father - отец-основатель
experience - опыт
sensation - ощущение
to survive - выживать
to adapt - приспосабливаться, адаптироваться
psychoanalysis - психоанализ
unconscious - бессознательный
to determine - определять
to be aware of - осознавать
observable - подлежащий наблюдению, наблюдаемый
objective science - объективная наука
to ignore - игнорировать
information processing - обработка информации
to confirm - подтверждать
dominant - доминирующий
aims - цели
evolutionary - эволюционный
genetic - генетический

The word psychology comes from two Greek words: "Psyche" mean­ing "mind" or "soul" and "Logos" meaning "study of. Therefore, psy­chology means " study of the mind". There are many modern definitions of the term. One of them belongs to Atkinson, who defined psychology as "the scientific study of behavior and mental processes". However, psychologists always disagreed not only about the definition of psychol­ogy, but also about what they should study and how they should do it.

The year 1879 is considered to be the start of psychology as a sepa­rate discipline. It was the date when Wilhelm Wundt created the first psychology laboratory in Leipzig, Germany. Americans disagree and think that William James was the " founding father of psychology" be­cause in 1875 he started teaching a course on the relationship between physiology and psychology at Harvard University. In 1890 he wrote a book "Principles of psychology" which was a very important step in the history of psychology.

Structuralism was the first approach in psychology. It was described by Wundt who thought that the object of psychological investigation should be the conscious mind. According to Wundt, the mind should be studied by introspection (looking at one's own mental experience) in order to break down into its components such as images, sensations and feelings.

Functionalism was developed by William James who thought that the workings of the mind are functional. The mind works to survive and adapt. So we should investigate what behavior and thoughts are for.

At the turn of the 19th century two powerful approaches appeared. One of them is psychoanalysis developed by Sigmund Freud in Austria. Freud wrote that the proper object of psychological investigation should be the unconscious mind and that our behaviour is determined by processes that we are not aware of.

Behaviorism, introduced by John Watson, was the most important of all approaches that investigated "minds" and proposed that psychol­ogy should investigate only observable behaviour if it wanted to be an objective science. This approach dominated experimental psychology until 1950's when a strong interest in the 'mind' developed in the form of the cognitive and humanistic approaches. Representatives of these approaches argued that behaviorism ignored all the most important and interesting things that go on in our heads.

Cognitive psychology investigates the mind by using computer in­formation processing ideas to arrive at models of how our brain works and then apply scientific methods to confirm these models. The cogni­tive approach was successful and is a very dominant one in psychology today.

The Humanistic approach has had less of an impact on psychology because it adapted less scientific view of the human mind. Humanistic psychologists argued that psychology should focus on each individual's conscious experience and aims in life.

The biological approach has advanced evolutionary, physiological and genetic explanation for human behavior throughout the history of psychology.


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