Chapter 8

Biological Psychology

Modified: 2023-12-29 1:18 PM CST


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ZEITGEIST (p. 237)

History of Biology

PREVIEW (p. 238)

INTRODUCTION (p. 238)

Learning Objective: Interpret the effect on biologists of so many changes to their field in so short a time.

Learning Objective: Appraise how Harvey’s methods led to a new view of an old problem, the circulation of blood in the body.

BIOLOGY BEFORE DARWIN (p. 240)

Learning Ojective: Briefly review the state of biology before Darwin.

DARWIN’S INFLUENCE ON BIOLOGY AND PSYCHOLOGY (p. 241)

creationism: the belief that God created all things in substantially the same form as they presently exist and that they did not evolve from distant ancestors.

natural selection: the competitive process by which organisms that are better adapted to survive the environmental conditions around them survive, and thus, reproduce more successfully leaving more offspring, and gradually altering the population characteristics of their own species.

Then AND NOW (p. 244)

Evolutionary Theory, Creationism, and Intelligent Design

Learning Objective: Discuss the role of multiple sources of evidence from geology and physics contributed to the acceptance of evolutionary theory.

NEUROANATOMY (p. 246)

transducer-in physiology, transducers are specialized organs, such as the eye and ear, that convert physical energy into neural information.

vitalism-the doctrine that physical and chemical forces alone are insufficient to explain living things, an additional and unknown life force is required.

Learning Objective: Survey the accumulation of scientific facts that led to the demise of vitalism as a theory in biology.

"Fechner wrote in a time before the emergence of psychology as a discipline and a profession.
(1) He offered a quantitative theory of pleasure as a computational principle in action, directed toward the goal of stability or equilibrium.
(2) Bodies and minds are collections of phenomena in Fechner’s phenomenalism. Mental changes are a function of bodily changes, but not vice versa, an asymmetric relationship. Double-aspect theory can be seen as relating clusters of body phenomena and mental phenomena. Is their relation functional or causal?
(3) Fechner’s psychological parallelism contributed a widely-accepted meme to nineteenth-century philosophical and psychological thought.
(4) Scholars have anchored his psychophysics in sensitivity, expanded it to a psychophysical worldview, and drawn lessons for memory from the inner psychophysics.
(5) Fechner’s experimental aesthetics drew on judgments of beautiful objects by naïve subjects, taking into consideration the proportions of the object as well as the feelings of the subject."

Learning Objective: Demonstrate how and why psychophysics was the first truly scientific subfield of psychology.

ANIMAL INTELIGENCE AND COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY (p. 256)

 

Learning Objective: Reflect on the history of comparative psychology. Why do you believe there has been such resistance to studying the psychology of animals?

PSYCHOMETRICS (p. 258)

THEN AND NOW (p. 260)

Psychometrics

Learning Objective: Recall your experiences with psychometrics; what standardized tests have you taken?

SUMMARY (p. 261)

GLOSSARY

psychophysiology the scientific study of the relationships between the physiological mechanisms of the body and corresponding cognitive states.

taxonomy the discovery, naming, and classification of animals, plants, and other living things.

natural selection the competitive process by which organisms that are better adapted to survive the environmental conditions around them survive, and thus, reproduce more successfully leaving more offspring, and gradually altering the population characteristics of their own species.

creationism the belief that God created all things in substantially the same form as they presently exist and that they did not evolve from distant ancestors.

Intelligent Design the theory that all living things on earth were created by a designer because no other mechanisms can account for the observed complexity of nature.

transducer in physiology, transducers are the specialized organs, such as the eye and ear, that convert physical energy into neural information

vitalism the doctrine that physical and chemical forces alone are insufficient to explain living things, an additional and unknown life force is required.

continuity the idea that all living things are related to each other to some degree.

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