SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 29
Descargar para leer sin conexión
Chapter Three  Early Notions about Learning
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Chapter Overview and Goals
Epistemology   Branch of philosophy that is concerned with the nature of knowledge. An epistemologist would ask the following questions: a. What is knowledge? b. What can we know? c. What are the limits of our knowledge? d. What does it mean to know? e. What are the origins of knowledge? The study of what is meant by "knowledge". What does it mean to "know" something as opposed to merely having an opinion. This issue has been at the core of Western philosophy since before Socrates, since, until it has been answered, all other questions become unsolvable. The study of what is meant by "knowledge". What does it mean to "know" something as opposed to merely having an opinion. This issue has been at the core of Western philosophy since before Socrates, since, until it has been answered, all other questions become unsolvable. From the ‘Net…
Wanna know what Plato believed?   Plato believed that knowledge was inherited and was, therefore, a natural component of the human mind. According to Plato, one gained knowledge by reflecting on the contents of one’s mind. Aristotle, in contrast, believed that knowledge derived from sensory experience and was not inherited.
Rationalism   The belief that the mind is actively involved in the attainment of knowledge.   Branch of philosophy which emphasizes reason or intellect, rather than observation or sensory perception, as the basis for knowledge and truth.   In essence, rationalism was a philosophical theory of knowledge that thrived especially as a movement in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, its greatest proponents being Renes Descartes (1596-1650), Benedict Spinoza (1632-77), and Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716). As a movement, rationalism was characterized by its confidence in reason , and intuition in particular, to know reality independently from sense experience. Thus, rationalism was the polar opposite of empiricism which asserted that knowledge could only be derived through sense experience. see Empiricism. In the nineteenth and twentieth century, the term rationalism has somewhat become synonymous with reason (ie scientific reason), over and against all systems of faith.   A branch of philosophy where truth is determined by reason. Rationalism, also known as the rationalist movement, is a philosophical doctrine that asserts that the truth should be determined by reason and factual analysis, rather than faith, dogma or religious teaching. Rationalism has  some  similarities in ideology and intent to secular humanism and atheism, in that it aims to provide a framework for social and philosophical discourse outside of religious or supernatural beliefs
Nativism  / Empiricism Nativism – The belief that knowledge is innate Empiricism- The importance of sensory experience as the basis of all knowledge. Nativism – (philosophy) the philosophical theory that some ideas are innate In psychology, "nativist" is comparable to "innate," the "hard-wired" components of human psychology. The view that some important aspects of perception and of other cognitive processes are innate. Empiricism  – the doctrine that says sense experience is the only source of knowledge.   A belief that experience alone is the source of all knowledge.   Empiricism is essentially a theory of knowledge which asserts that all knowledge is derived from sense experience. It rejects the notion that the mind is furnished with a range of concepts or ideas prior to experience. In the thought of John Locke (1632-1704), the human mind is a tabula rasa (ie, a blank tablet) at birth; thus, knowledge is acquired as the mind experiences external reality through the senses. Three principal British philosophers who are associated with empiricism are John Locke (1632-1704), George Berkeley (1685-1753), and David Hume (1711-76).   in philosophy, a doctrine that affirms that all knowledge is based on experience, and denies the possibility of spontaneous ideas or a priori thought. Empiricism (greek εμπειρισμός, from empirical, latin experientia - the experience) is generally regarded as being at the heart of the modern scientific method, that our theories should be based on our observations of the world rather than on intuition or faith; that is, empirical research and a posteriori inductive reasoning rather than purely deductive logic.   Other Definitions
Plato was Socrates’ most famous student. In fact, Socrates never wrote a word about his philosophy – it was written by Plato. This is a most significant fact because the early Platonic dialogues were designed primarily to show the Socratic approach to knowledge and were memories of the great teacher at work. The later dialogues, however, represent Plato's own philosophy and have little to do with Socrates. Plato was so upset by the execution of Socrates for impiety that he went on a self-imposed exile to southern Italy, where he came under the influence of the Pythagoreans. This fact has important implications for Western people and is directly related to all approaches to epistemology, including learning theory, that have occurred since.   Pythagoreans - The Pythagoreans were an Hellenic organization of astronomers, musicians, mathematicians, and philosophers; who believed that all things are, essentially, numeric. The group strove to keep the discovery of irrational numbers a secret; and legends tell of a member being drowned, for breaching this secrecy (see Hippasus).   Plato
a mental impression retained and recalled from the past  recall: the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort); "he has total recall of the episode"   Life review activity aimed at surfacing and reviewing positive memories and experiences. The recollection of the experience our soul had in the “heaven which is beyond the heavens”  The “minds eye” Reminiscence Theory of Knowledge   Plato was a nativist because he felt knowledge was inborn.  and a rationalist because he believed knowledge could only be made available through reasoning
One of Plato's students. First followed Plato's teaching quite closely and later broke away from them almost completely. A basic difference between he two thinkers was in their attitude toward sensory information. To plato it was a hindrance and something to be distrusted, but to Aristotle sensory information was the basis of all knowledge. With his favorable attitude toward empirical observation, Aristotle complied an extraordinarily large number of facts about physical and biological phenomena.  Differed with Plato in that… the laws, forms, or universals that Aristotle was looking for did not have an existence independent of their empirical manifestation, as they did for Plato. They were simply observed relationships in nature. Second, for Aristotle all knowledge is based on sensory experience. This, or course, was not the case with Plato. It is because Aristotle contended that the source of all knowledge is sensory experience that he is labeled an empiricist.   Aristotle
The traditional laws of association, based on Aristotle, are:  Similarity  Contrast  Contiguity in time or space.   Laws of Association In the philosophy of mind, associationism began as a theory about how ideas combine in the mind. John Locke suggested that each of us was born without any innate capabilities - a Tabula Rasa - which learned to form representations as a result of experiences, rather than of reason. "Experimental Psychology", as David Hume (1711-1776) called it, was concerned with studying the mind as a mirror of representations of nature, constantly trying to make sense of the world.
Wrote  De Anima  – First history of psychology With his death, came the end to empiricism in science. Plato – incorporated writings into dogma of the church Religion is defined as philosophy in the absence of dialogue.  Aristotle
Rene Descartes Believed in a separation between the mind and the body. Viewed the body as predictable, like a machine, but said the mind was a  unique human attribute. Belief in Plato’s earlier notion of nativism (1596-1650) Wrote Meditations on First Philosophy and Discourse on Method. Rejected Aristotelian and Scholastic traditions; Boosted rationalism . Descartes: French philosopher and mathematician; developed dualistic theory of mind and matter; introduced the use of coordinates to locate a point in two or three dimensions (1596-1650)  Ren Descartes (IPA: , March 31, 1596 – February 11, 1650), also known as Cartesius, worked as a philosopher and mathematician. He is equally notable for both his groundbreaking work in philosophy and mathematics. As the inventor of the Cartesian coordinate system, he formulated the basis of modern geometry (analytic geometry), which in turn influenced the development of modern calculus.
Thomas Hobbes Opposed the notion that innate ideas are a source of knowledge. He maintained that sense impressions are of all knowledge. With this belief, Hobbes repened the philosophical school of empiricism and its related associationism. He believed that stimuli either help or hinder the vital functions of the body. A stimulus that aids in the vital functioning of the body causes a feeling of pleasure; therefore the person seeks to experience this pleasure again.  Hobbes: English materialist and political philosopher who advocated absolute sovereignty as the only kind of government that could resolve problems caused by the selfishness of human beings (1588-1679)  Thomas Hobbes (April 5, 1588 - December 4, 1679) was a noted English political philosopher, most famous for his book Leviathan (1651).
John Locke Locke: English empiricist philosopher who believed that all knowledge is derived from sensory experience (1632-1704)  John Locke (August 29 1632–October 28 1704) was a 17th century philosopher concerned primarily with society and epistemology. An Englishman, Locke's notions of a "government with the consent of the governed" and man's natural rights—life, liberty, and estate (property)—had an enormous influence on the development of political philosophy. His ideas formed the basis for the concepts used in American law and government, allowing the colonists to justify revolution.  Opposed the notion of innate ideas. For him, the mind is made up of ideas, and ideas come from experience. He indicated that if ideas were innate, people everywhere would possess them, but they do not. Rather, different cultural groups differ markedly in what they think and believe. Thus, the infant mind at birth is a  tabula rosa , a blank tablet, and experience writes on it. The mind becomes what it experiences;  there is nothing in the mind that is not first in the senses.  Simple ideas come directly from sense experience; complex ideas come from combining simple ideas. He was an empiricist with a rationalist component.
George Berkeley   Berkeley: Irish philosopher and Anglican bishop who opposed the materialism of Thomas Hobbes (1685-1753)  George Berkeley (bark-lee) (March 12, 1685–January 14, 1753), also known as Bishop Berkeley, was an influential Irish philosopher whose primary philosophical achievement is the advancement of what has come to be called subjective idealism, summed up in his dictum, "Esse est percipi" ("To be is to be perceived"). He wrote a number of works, the most widely-read of which are his Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) and Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous (1713 Claimed that Locke did not go far enough. There was still a kind of dualism in Locke’s view that physical objects cause ideas about them. Nothing exists unless it is perceived; thus to be is to be perceived. What we call primary qualities, such as shape and size, are really only secondary qualities or ideas. Ideas are the only thing we can be sure of. HE was an empiricist : what we experience through our senses are God’s ideas.
David Hume Hume: Scottish philosopher whose skeptical philosophy restricted human knowledge to that which can be perceived by the senses (1711-1776)   Agreed with Berkley that we could know nothing for sure about the physical environment, he added that we could know nothing for sure about ideas.  We can be sure of nothing . Mind, for Hume, was no more than a stream of ideas, memories, imaginings, associations, and feelings. HE was saying that we only experience the empirical world indirectly through our ideas. Even the laws of nature are constructs of the imaginations... the  “ lawlessness ”  of nature is in our minds, not necessarily in nature.
Immanuel Kant   German philosopher and founder of critical philosophy. Explored role of knowledge and mind. Contributed to metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and aesthetics. A large part of Kant's work addresses the question "What can we know?" The answer, if it can be stated simply, is that our knowledge is constrained to mathematics and the science of the natural, empirical world. It is impossible, Kant argues, to extend knowledge to the supersensible realm of speculative metaphysics. The reason that knowledge has these constraints, Kant argues, is that the mind plays an active role in constituting the features of experience and limiting the mind's access to the empirical realm of space and time.  Despised Hume. Kant attempted to correct the impractical features of both rationalism and empiricism. Rationalism can involve on the manipulation of concepts, and empiricism confines knowledge to sensory experience and its derivatives. Kant attempted to reconcile both points of view.    Kant reasoned that that there must be  innate categories of thought  – These categories of thought, or “faculties,” are neither part of our sensory experience not derived from it. If these thoughts are not the result of sensory experience, then they are innate categories of thought .
John Stuart Mill Accepting the notion that complex ideas are made up of simpler ideas, mill added the notion that some simple ideas combine into a new totality that may bear little resemblance to its parts. For example, if we combine blue, red, and green lights, we get white. In other words, Mill believed that  the whole is different from the sum of its parts . Thus Mill modified the empiricist contention that all ideas reflect sensory stimulation. For him, when some ideas combine they produce an idea that is unlike any of the elemental ideas that make up the emergent idea.
Thomas Reid Reid: Scottish philosopher of common sense who opposed the ideas of David Hume (1710-1796)  Reid believed that the mind has powers of its own, which strongly influence how we perceive the world. He hypothesized twenty-seven faculties of the mind, most of which were thought to be innate. The belief in the existence of such faculties in the mind was latter called  faculty psychology. Faculty psychology is a view of the mind as having separate modules or faculties assigned to various mental tasks. The view is implicit in Franz Joseph Gall's formulation of phrenology, the disreputed practice of measuring personality traits by measuring bumps on one's head.   Naive Realism   The philosophical view that perception accurately portrays all objects and events in the world. In philosophy naive realism is used to describe the belief that physical objects continue to exist when they are no longer perceived. It can be contrasted with solipsism.
Phrenology -  is the long practiced study of head formations. An early nineteenth-century fad that involved palpating bumps and indentations on the head in order to judge the examinee’s intellectual and personality traits. A forerunner of modern theories of cerebral localization, phrenology nonetheless had no validity. Belief that there is a relationship between mental attributes and the shape of the head. Started in 1800 by  Franz Gall  and Johann Spurzheim that the brain was divided into areas of self-esteem, destructiveness, etc. For a while it was fashionable for people to go and have their bumps read. Phrenology is a theory which claims to be able to determine character and personality traits and criminality on the basis of the shape of the head (reading "bumps"). Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall around 1800, and very popular in the 19th century, it is now discredited as a pseudoscience.   Franz Joseph Gall  First, he assumed that the faculties were housed in specific locations in the brain. Second, he believed that the faculties of the mind did not exist to the same extent in every individual. Third, he believed that if a faculty was well developed, there would be a bump or protrusion on the part of the skull corresponding to the place in the brain that houses that faculty. Likewise is a faculty was poorly developed, a hollow or depression would be found on the skull.  Franz Joseph Gall (March 9, 1758 - August 22, 1828) was a German neuroanatomist and physiologist who was a pioneer in the study of the localization of mental functions in the brain.
Charles Darwin  Charles Darwin, a British naturalist, revolutionized biology with his theory of evolution through the process of NATURAL SELECTION. He also made significant contributions to the fields of natural history and geology. The theory of evolution, which held that all living species have evolved from preexisting forms, aroused great controversy and brought about a reevaluation of the position of humans in relation to all other living forms.
Hermann Ebbinghaus A  German psychologist who pioneered experimental study of memory, and discovered the forgetting curve.   Invented his own “nonsense material” which consists of syllables containng a vowel between town consonants (e.g., QAW, JIG, XUW, CEW, or TEB). The syllables were not the nonsense, It was the relationships among the syllables that were meaningless. Thus we use the term  nonsense material  instead of  nonsense syllables. How many exposures to learn something.. And how many to go back to and remember it (savings)
Voluntarism Theory that God or the ultimate nature of reality is conceived as some form of will.   the doctrine that will is the basic factor, both in the universe and in human conduct.  The concept that belief is a matter of the will.
Apperception  introspective self-consciousness Perception as modified and enhanced by one's own emotions, memories, and biases. The appreciation of objects or ideas in their entire significance, as they are related to all other objects or ideas, including the mind, which is thus considering them. Physiologically, apperception is the consciousness associated with the activities of the intermediate areas, both anterior and posterior, as these are affected by the activities of the sensory overflow areas. It is evident that a very nice balancing of the impulses to and from the different areas is required in order that these different activities may be coordinated; therefore apperception is a function only of neurons well developed and well related in development Apperception is realized when man's ability to think judges one thing by another and draws conclusions. Thus, the other thing is established in the mind. The objects of apperception are of different kinds. Some of them concern things that are certain by nature. Others concern things that are hypothetical in various degrees. Apperception ultimately reverts to perception because the only purpose of having apperception is to achieve knowledge of the realities of things. The process of going from perception over to apperception and back again is therefore continuous.
The elements of thought could be willfully arranged in any number of combinations. It is this emphasis on will that his school or psychology is called voluntarism.  Creative Synthesis
Structuralism is a psychological approach that emphasized studying the elemental structures of consciousness the view that behind the social and cultural realities we perceive, such as clothes or food fashions, kinship organization and even language itself, deep structures exist which, through combinations of their elements, produce the surface complexity of the relevant phenomena. Poststructuralism retains elements of structuralism (its interest in surface signs for example) but abandons the quest for deep structures. Introspection  was a major tool used in structuralism. Trained to report  immediate experience . To name the object (called a  stimulus error ).
Functionalism the theory that all elements of a culture are functional in that they serve to satisfy culturally defined needs of the people in that society or requirements of the society as a whole.
William James Founder of the functionalist movement.
John Watson / Behaviorism A branch of psychology that bases its observations and conclusions on definable and measurable behavior and on experimental methods, rather than on concept of "mind.“ Behaviorism is a psychological theory first put forth by John Watson (1925), and then expounded upon by BF Skinner. Attempting to answer the question of human behavior, proponents of this theory essentially hold that all human behavior is learned from one's surrounding context and environment.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Cultural & Aesthetic Values of Mathematics
Cultural & Aesthetic Values of MathematicsCultural & Aesthetic Values of Mathematics
Cultural & Aesthetic Values of MathematicsSreelekshmiV5
 
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptx
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptxTeaching as an art as well as science.pptx
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptxSiamkimaHnamte
 
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-kerala
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-keralaSecondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-kerala
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-keralakgbiju
 
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.SnehaHazra
 
Approaches for curriculum organization
Approaches for curriculum organizationApproaches for curriculum organization
Approaches for curriculum organizationjeniferdivya
 
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and Definition of Mathematics
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and  Definition of  Mathematics Nature ,Scope,Meaning and  Definition of  Mathematics
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and Definition of Mathematics AngelSophia2
 
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)Dr.Jaganmohana Rao Gurugubelli
 
Meaning and definition of mathematics
Meaning and definition of mathematicsMeaning and definition of mathematics
Meaning and definition of mathematicsAngelSophia2
 
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptx
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptxRELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptx
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptxManiklalMaity1
 
Philosophy of education
Philosophy of educationPhilosophy of education
Philosophy of educationAmit Newton
 
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptx
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptxNature and Development of Mathematics.pptx
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptxaleena568026
 
Scope of Mathematics.ppt
Scope of Mathematics.pptScope of Mathematics.ppt
Scope of Mathematics.pptjobwork5
 
Pramod Katti-Micro Teaching
Pramod Katti-Micro TeachingPramod Katti-Micro Teaching
Pramod Katti-Micro TeachingPramod Katti
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Models of Teaching
Models of TeachingModels of Teaching
Models of Teaching
 
Cultural & Aesthetic Values of Mathematics
Cultural & Aesthetic Values of MathematicsCultural & Aesthetic Values of Mathematics
Cultural & Aesthetic Values of Mathematics
 
Sources of knowledge
Sources of knowledgeSources of knowledge
Sources of knowledge
 
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptx
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptxTeaching as an art as well as science.pptx
Teaching as an art as well as science.pptx
 
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-kerala
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-keralaSecondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-kerala
Secondary level-mathematics-curriculum-of-kerala
 
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.
Educational Psychology- Definition, Nature, Scope, Importance and Issues.
 
Approaches for curriculum organization
Approaches for curriculum organizationApproaches for curriculum organization
Approaches for curriculum organization
 
Educational technology IN SYSTEM APPROACH
Educational technology IN SYSTEM APPROACHEducational technology IN SYSTEM APPROACH
Educational technology IN SYSTEM APPROACH
 
NATURE OF TEACHING/ TEACHING AS A PROFESSION
NATURE OF TEACHING/ TEACHING AS A PROFESSIONNATURE OF TEACHING/ TEACHING AS A PROFESSION
NATURE OF TEACHING/ TEACHING AS A PROFESSION
 
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and Definition of Mathematics
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and  Definition of  Mathematics Nature ,Scope,Meaning and  Definition of  Mathematics
Nature ,Scope,Meaning and Definition of Mathematics
 
Nature of Mathematics.pptx
Nature of Mathematics.pptxNature of Mathematics.pptx
Nature of Mathematics.pptx
 
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)
Teaching mathematics introduction (meaning, nature & values)
 
Meaning and definition of mathematics
Meaning and definition of mathematicsMeaning and definition of mathematics
Meaning and definition of mathematics
 
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptx
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptxRELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptx
RELATIONSHIP OF MATHEMATICS WITH OTHER SCHOOL SUBJECT.pptx
 
Philosophy of education
Philosophy of educationPhilosophy of education
Philosophy of education
 
Pedagogical Bases of Education
Pedagogical Bases of EducationPedagogical Bases of Education
Pedagogical Bases of Education
 
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptx
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptxNature and Development of Mathematics.pptx
Nature and Development of Mathematics.pptx
 
Scope of Mathematics.ppt
Scope of Mathematics.pptScope of Mathematics.ppt
Scope of Mathematics.ppt
 
Pramod Katti-Micro Teaching
Pramod Katti-Micro TeachingPramod Katti-Micro Teaching
Pramod Katti-Micro Teaching
 
Humanism in Education
Humanism in EducationHumanism in Education
Humanism in Education
 

Destacado

What Is Learning? A N D How Do We Learn?
What Is  Learning? A N D  How Do We Learn?What Is  Learning? A N D  How Do We Learn?
What Is Learning? A N D How Do We Learn?Brent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
Approaches To The Study Of Learning
Approaches To The  Study Of  LearningApproaches To The  Study Of  Learning
Approaches To The Study Of LearningBrent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
Learning approach & learning models
Learning approach & learning modelsLearning approach & learning models
Learning approach & learning modelsgadis123
 
Approaches to learning (atl)
Approaches to learning (atl)Approaches to learning (atl)
Approaches to learning (atl)Rory Galvin
 
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervision
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervisionTrends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervision
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervisionchiriter
 
Learning theories
Learning theoriesLearning theories
Learning theoriesSukkur IBA
 
History of language teaching by Howatt
History of language teaching by HowattHistory of language teaching by Howatt
History of language teaching by HowattHossein Maskani
 
Chapter 3 Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraints
Chapter 3   Organizational Culture And Environment The ConstraintsChapter 3   Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraints
Chapter 3 Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraintsmanagement 2
 
Citizen Power Project
Citizen Power ProjectCitizen Power Project
Citizen Power Projectsmuemd
 
Digital Storytelling For Students With Autism
Digital Storytelling For Students With AutismDigital Storytelling For Students With Autism
Digital Storytelling For Students With AutismBrent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
Planning And Providing Special Education Services
Planning And Providing  Special Education ServicesPlanning And Providing  Special Education Services
Planning And Providing Special Education ServicesBrent Daigle, Ph.D.
 

Destacado (20)

Early notions-about-learning
Early notions-about-learningEarly notions-about-learning
Early notions-about-learning
 
What Is Learning? A N D How Do We Learn?
What Is  Learning? A N D  How Do We Learn?What Is  Learning? A N D  How Do We Learn?
What Is Learning? A N D How Do We Learn?
 
Approaches To The Study Of Learning
Approaches To The  Study Of  LearningApproaches To The  Study Of  Learning
Approaches To The Study Of Learning
 
Learning approach & learning models
Learning approach & learning modelsLearning approach & learning models
Learning approach & learning models
 
Approaches to learning (atl)
Approaches to learning (atl)Approaches to learning (atl)
Approaches to learning (atl)
 
Neo Behaviorism
Neo BehaviorismNeo Behaviorism
Neo Behaviorism
 
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervision
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervisionTrends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervision
Trends, issues & concerns in school administration & supervision
 
Learning theories
Learning theoriesLearning theories
Learning theories
 
History of language teaching by Howatt
History of language teaching by HowattHistory of language teaching by Howatt
History of language teaching by Howatt
 
Neo Behaviorism
Neo BehaviorismNeo Behaviorism
Neo Behaviorism
 
Chapter 3 Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraints
Chapter 3   Organizational Culture And Environment The ConstraintsChapter 3   Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraints
Chapter 3 Organizational Culture And Environment The Constraints
 
Marketing automation w praktyce - Tomasz Kryk
Marketing automation w praktyce - Tomasz KrykMarketing automation w praktyce - Tomasz Kryk
Marketing automation w praktyce - Tomasz Kryk
 
Back To School Tips For Teachers
Back To School Tips For TeachersBack To School Tips For Teachers
Back To School Tips For Teachers
 
Adjectives
AdjectivesAdjectives
Adjectives
 
Citizen Power Project
Citizen Power ProjectCitizen Power Project
Citizen Power Project
 
Digital Storytelling For Students With Autism
Digital Storytelling For Students With AutismDigital Storytelling For Students With Autism
Digital Storytelling For Students With Autism
 
Planning And Providing Special Education Services
Planning And Providing  Special Education ServicesPlanning And Providing  Special Education Services
Planning And Providing Special Education Services
 
Overview Of Direct Instruction
Overview Of  Direct  InstructionOverview Of  Direct  Instruction
Overview Of Direct Instruction
 
Study Skills Essentials
Study Skills EssentialsStudy Skills Essentials
Study Skills Essentials
 
Steve Jobs
Steve JobsSteve Jobs
Steve Jobs
 

Similar a Early Notions About Learning

Introduction to Logic
Introduction to LogicIntroduction to Logic
Introduction to LogicRuby Angela
 
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptx
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptxPHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptx
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptxJenevieveMercader1
 
Report philosophers
Report  philosophersReport  philosophers
Report philosophersNeli Garsula
 
Philosophy of man 5
Philosophy of man 5Philosophy of man 5
Philosophy of man 5CD Balubayan
 
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptx
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptxUNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptx
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptxLeymarkLayan
 
The self from various perspectives .pptx
The self from various perspectives .pptxThe self from various perspectives .pptx
The self from various perspectives .pptxLeymarkLayan
 
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptx
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptxClassical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptx
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptxMeiselaHardiantimeis
 
Empiricism and Rationalism
Empiricism and RationalismEmpiricism and Rationalism
Empiricism and RationalismFatima Maqbool
 
psychology.pptx
psychology.pptxpsychology.pptx
psychology.pptxAMIClub1
 
Introduction to Philosophy
Introduction to PhilosophyIntroduction to Philosophy
Introduction to PhilosophyChoobie Albia
 
Important Topics Short.docx
Important Topics Short.docxImportant Topics Short.docx
Important Topics Short.docxUsmanMehboob4
 
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptx
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptxLESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptx
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptxGianCarlosBolaos2
 
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counseling
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counselingPhilosophical foundation of guidance and counseling
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counselingEmmanuel Gamana
 

Similar a Early Notions About Learning (20)

Introduction to Logic
Introduction to LogicIntroduction to Logic
Introduction to Logic
 
Philosophy
PhilosophyPhilosophy
Philosophy
 
Nature of philosophy
Nature of philosophyNature of philosophy
Nature of philosophy
 
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptx
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptxPHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptx
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES (2).pptx
 
My Philosophy Essay
My Philosophy EssayMy Philosophy Essay
My Philosophy Essay
 
Report philosophers
Report  philosophersReport  philosophers
Report philosophers
 
Philosophy of man 5
Philosophy of man 5Philosophy of man 5
Philosophy of man 5
 
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptx
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptxUNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptx
UNDERSTANDING THE SELF LESSON 1.pptx
 
The self from various perspectives .pptx
The self from various perspectives .pptxThe self from various perspectives .pptx
The self from various perspectives .pptx
 
Essay On Philosophy
Essay On PhilosophyEssay On Philosophy
Essay On Philosophy
 
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptx
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptxClassical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptx
Classical and Modern Philosophy: Rationalism and Empiricism .pptx
 
What is philosophy1
What is philosophy1What is philosophy1
What is philosophy1
 
Empiricism and Rationalism
Empiricism and RationalismEmpiricism and Rationalism
Empiricism and Rationalism
 
Rationalism
RationalismRationalism
Rationalism
 
psychology.pptx
psychology.pptxpsychology.pptx
psychology.pptx
 
Introduction to Philosophy
Introduction to PhilosophyIntroduction to Philosophy
Introduction to Philosophy
 
Rationalism
RationalismRationalism
Rationalism
 
Important Topics Short.docx
Important Topics Short.docxImportant Topics Short.docx
Important Topics Short.docx
 
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptx
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptxLESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptx
LESSON-1-WHAT-IS-PHILOSOPHY.pptx
 
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counseling
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counselingPhilosophical foundation of guidance and counseling
Philosophical foundation of guidance and counseling
 

Más de Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACH
SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACHSPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACH
SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACHBrent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOP
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOPEL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOP
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOPBrent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Brent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Brent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015Brent Daigle, Ph.D.
 
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015Brent Daigle, Ph.D.
 

Más de Brent Daigle, Ph.D. (20)

PRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS WorkshopPRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS Workshop
 
Texas Exam Workshop
Texas Exam WorkshopTexas Exam Workshop
Texas Exam Workshop
 
PRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS WorkshopPRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS Workshop
 
PRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS WorkshopPRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS Workshop
 
GACE workshop
GACE workshopGACE workshop
GACE workshop
 
NYSTCE - SBL Exam Workshop
NYSTCE - SBL Exam Workshop NYSTCE - SBL Exam Workshop
NYSTCE - SBL Exam Workshop
 
PRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS Workshop PRAXIS Workshop
PRAXIS Workshop
 
PLACE Workshop - April 30, 2016
PLACE Workshop - April 30, 2016PLACE Workshop - April 30, 2016
PLACE Workshop - April 30, 2016
 
CPACE/CBEST Workshop
CPACE/CBEST WorkshopCPACE/CBEST Workshop
CPACE/CBEST Workshop
 
UK TEACHERS: JULY 2016
UK TEACHERS: JULY 2016UK TEACHERS: JULY 2016
UK TEACHERS: JULY 2016
 
SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACH
SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACHSPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACH
SPOTLIGHT: A RESEARCH-BASED READING APPROACH
 
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOP
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOPEL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOP
EL PASO, TX: TEXES ESL EXAM WORKSHOP
 
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
 
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015Baton Rouge, LA:  PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
Baton Rouge, LA: PRAXIS Workshop - SLLA & PLT - November 21, 2015
 
Gace workshop
Gace workshopGace workshop
Gace workshop
 
ORELA Workshop
ORELA WorkshopORELA Workshop
ORELA Workshop
 
PRAXIS Workshop - Salt Lake City
PRAXIS Workshop - Salt Lake CityPRAXIS Workshop - Salt Lake City
PRAXIS Workshop - Salt Lake City
 
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015
FTCE / FELE WORKSHOP – MAY, 2015
 
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015
NYSTCE EXAM WORKSHOP – SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2015
 
Baltimore, MD - PRAXIS Workshop
Baltimore, MD  - PRAXIS Workshop Baltimore, MD  - PRAXIS Workshop
Baltimore, MD - PRAXIS Workshop
 

Early Notions About Learning

  • 1. Chapter Three Early Notions about Learning
  • 2.
  • 3. Epistemology Branch of philosophy that is concerned with the nature of knowledge. An epistemologist would ask the following questions: a. What is knowledge? b. What can we know? c. What are the limits of our knowledge? d. What does it mean to know? e. What are the origins of knowledge? The study of what is meant by "knowledge". What does it mean to "know" something as opposed to merely having an opinion. This issue has been at the core of Western philosophy since before Socrates, since, until it has been answered, all other questions become unsolvable. The study of what is meant by "knowledge". What does it mean to "know" something as opposed to merely having an opinion. This issue has been at the core of Western philosophy since before Socrates, since, until it has been answered, all other questions become unsolvable. From the ‘Net…
  • 4. Wanna know what Plato believed? Plato believed that knowledge was inherited and was, therefore, a natural component of the human mind. According to Plato, one gained knowledge by reflecting on the contents of one’s mind. Aristotle, in contrast, believed that knowledge derived from sensory experience and was not inherited.
  • 5. Rationalism The belief that the mind is actively involved in the attainment of knowledge. Branch of philosophy which emphasizes reason or intellect, rather than observation or sensory perception, as the basis for knowledge and truth. In essence, rationalism was a philosophical theory of knowledge that thrived especially as a movement in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, its greatest proponents being Renes Descartes (1596-1650), Benedict Spinoza (1632-77), and Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716). As a movement, rationalism was characterized by its confidence in reason , and intuition in particular, to know reality independently from sense experience. Thus, rationalism was the polar opposite of empiricism which asserted that knowledge could only be derived through sense experience. see Empiricism. In the nineteenth and twentieth century, the term rationalism has somewhat become synonymous with reason (ie scientific reason), over and against all systems of faith. A branch of philosophy where truth is determined by reason. Rationalism, also known as the rationalist movement, is a philosophical doctrine that asserts that the truth should be determined by reason and factual analysis, rather than faith, dogma or religious teaching. Rationalism has some similarities in ideology and intent to secular humanism and atheism, in that it aims to provide a framework for social and philosophical discourse outside of religious or supernatural beliefs
  • 6. Nativism / Empiricism Nativism – The belief that knowledge is innate Empiricism- The importance of sensory experience as the basis of all knowledge. Nativism – (philosophy) the philosophical theory that some ideas are innate In psychology, "nativist" is comparable to "innate," the "hard-wired" components of human psychology. The view that some important aspects of perception and of other cognitive processes are innate. Empiricism – the doctrine that says sense experience is the only source of knowledge. A belief that experience alone is the source of all knowledge. Empiricism is essentially a theory of knowledge which asserts that all knowledge is derived from sense experience. It rejects the notion that the mind is furnished with a range of concepts or ideas prior to experience. In the thought of John Locke (1632-1704), the human mind is a tabula rasa (ie, a blank tablet) at birth; thus, knowledge is acquired as the mind experiences external reality through the senses. Three principal British philosophers who are associated with empiricism are John Locke (1632-1704), George Berkeley (1685-1753), and David Hume (1711-76). in philosophy, a doctrine that affirms that all knowledge is based on experience, and denies the possibility of spontaneous ideas or a priori thought. Empiricism (greek εμπειρισμός, from empirical, latin experientia - the experience) is generally regarded as being at the heart of the modern scientific method, that our theories should be based on our observations of the world rather than on intuition or faith; that is, empirical research and a posteriori inductive reasoning rather than purely deductive logic. Other Definitions
  • 7. Plato was Socrates’ most famous student. In fact, Socrates never wrote a word about his philosophy – it was written by Plato. This is a most significant fact because the early Platonic dialogues were designed primarily to show the Socratic approach to knowledge and were memories of the great teacher at work. The later dialogues, however, represent Plato's own philosophy and have little to do with Socrates. Plato was so upset by the execution of Socrates for impiety that he went on a self-imposed exile to southern Italy, where he came under the influence of the Pythagoreans. This fact has important implications for Western people and is directly related to all approaches to epistemology, including learning theory, that have occurred since. Pythagoreans - The Pythagoreans were an Hellenic organization of astronomers, musicians, mathematicians, and philosophers; who believed that all things are, essentially, numeric. The group strove to keep the discovery of irrational numbers a secret; and legends tell of a member being drowned, for breaching this secrecy (see Hippasus). Plato
  • 8. a mental impression retained and recalled from the past recall: the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort); "he has total recall of the episode" Life review activity aimed at surfacing and reviewing positive memories and experiences. The recollection of the experience our soul had in the “heaven which is beyond the heavens” The “minds eye” Reminiscence Theory of Knowledge Plato was a nativist because he felt knowledge was inborn. and a rationalist because he believed knowledge could only be made available through reasoning
  • 9. One of Plato's students. First followed Plato's teaching quite closely and later broke away from them almost completely. A basic difference between he two thinkers was in their attitude toward sensory information. To plato it was a hindrance and something to be distrusted, but to Aristotle sensory information was the basis of all knowledge. With his favorable attitude toward empirical observation, Aristotle complied an extraordinarily large number of facts about physical and biological phenomena. Differed with Plato in that… the laws, forms, or universals that Aristotle was looking for did not have an existence independent of their empirical manifestation, as they did for Plato. They were simply observed relationships in nature. Second, for Aristotle all knowledge is based on sensory experience. This, or course, was not the case with Plato. It is because Aristotle contended that the source of all knowledge is sensory experience that he is labeled an empiricist. Aristotle
  • 10. The traditional laws of association, based on Aristotle, are: Similarity Contrast Contiguity in time or space. Laws of Association In the philosophy of mind, associationism began as a theory about how ideas combine in the mind. John Locke suggested that each of us was born without any innate capabilities - a Tabula Rasa - which learned to form representations as a result of experiences, rather than of reason. "Experimental Psychology", as David Hume (1711-1776) called it, was concerned with studying the mind as a mirror of representations of nature, constantly trying to make sense of the world.
  • 11. Wrote De Anima – First history of psychology With his death, came the end to empiricism in science. Plato – incorporated writings into dogma of the church Religion is defined as philosophy in the absence of dialogue. Aristotle
  • 12. Rene Descartes Believed in a separation between the mind and the body. Viewed the body as predictable, like a machine, but said the mind was a unique human attribute. Belief in Plato’s earlier notion of nativism (1596-1650) Wrote Meditations on First Philosophy and Discourse on Method. Rejected Aristotelian and Scholastic traditions; Boosted rationalism . Descartes: French philosopher and mathematician; developed dualistic theory of mind and matter; introduced the use of coordinates to locate a point in two or three dimensions (1596-1650) Ren Descartes (IPA: , March 31, 1596 – February 11, 1650), also known as Cartesius, worked as a philosopher and mathematician. He is equally notable for both his groundbreaking work in philosophy and mathematics. As the inventor of the Cartesian coordinate system, he formulated the basis of modern geometry (analytic geometry), which in turn influenced the development of modern calculus.
  • 13. Thomas Hobbes Opposed the notion that innate ideas are a source of knowledge. He maintained that sense impressions are of all knowledge. With this belief, Hobbes repened the philosophical school of empiricism and its related associationism. He believed that stimuli either help or hinder the vital functions of the body. A stimulus that aids in the vital functioning of the body causes a feeling of pleasure; therefore the person seeks to experience this pleasure again. Hobbes: English materialist and political philosopher who advocated absolute sovereignty as the only kind of government that could resolve problems caused by the selfishness of human beings (1588-1679) Thomas Hobbes (April 5, 1588 - December 4, 1679) was a noted English political philosopher, most famous for his book Leviathan (1651).
  • 14. John Locke Locke: English empiricist philosopher who believed that all knowledge is derived from sensory experience (1632-1704) John Locke (August 29 1632–October 28 1704) was a 17th century philosopher concerned primarily with society and epistemology. An Englishman, Locke's notions of a "government with the consent of the governed" and man's natural rights—life, liberty, and estate (property)—had an enormous influence on the development of political philosophy. His ideas formed the basis for the concepts used in American law and government, allowing the colonists to justify revolution. Opposed the notion of innate ideas. For him, the mind is made up of ideas, and ideas come from experience. He indicated that if ideas were innate, people everywhere would possess them, but they do not. Rather, different cultural groups differ markedly in what they think and believe. Thus, the infant mind at birth is a tabula rosa , a blank tablet, and experience writes on it. The mind becomes what it experiences; there is nothing in the mind that is not first in the senses. Simple ideas come directly from sense experience; complex ideas come from combining simple ideas. He was an empiricist with a rationalist component.
  • 15. George Berkeley Berkeley: Irish philosopher and Anglican bishop who opposed the materialism of Thomas Hobbes (1685-1753) George Berkeley (bark-lee) (March 12, 1685–January 14, 1753), also known as Bishop Berkeley, was an influential Irish philosopher whose primary philosophical achievement is the advancement of what has come to be called subjective idealism, summed up in his dictum, "Esse est percipi" ("To be is to be perceived"). He wrote a number of works, the most widely-read of which are his Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) and Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous (1713 Claimed that Locke did not go far enough. There was still a kind of dualism in Locke’s view that physical objects cause ideas about them. Nothing exists unless it is perceived; thus to be is to be perceived. What we call primary qualities, such as shape and size, are really only secondary qualities or ideas. Ideas are the only thing we can be sure of. HE was an empiricist : what we experience through our senses are God’s ideas.
  • 16. David Hume Hume: Scottish philosopher whose skeptical philosophy restricted human knowledge to that which can be perceived by the senses (1711-1776) Agreed with Berkley that we could know nothing for sure about the physical environment, he added that we could know nothing for sure about ideas. We can be sure of nothing . Mind, for Hume, was no more than a stream of ideas, memories, imaginings, associations, and feelings. HE was saying that we only experience the empirical world indirectly through our ideas. Even the laws of nature are constructs of the imaginations... the “ lawlessness ” of nature is in our minds, not necessarily in nature.
  • 17. Immanuel Kant German philosopher and founder of critical philosophy. Explored role of knowledge and mind. Contributed to metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and aesthetics. A large part of Kant's work addresses the question "What can we know?" The answer, if it can be stated simply, is that our knowledge is constrained to mathematics and the science of the natural, empirical world. It is impossible, Kant argues, to extend knowledge to the supersensible realm of speculative metaphysics. The reason that knowledge has these constraints, Kant argues, is that the mind plays an active role in constituting the features of experience and limiting the mind's access to the empirical realm of space and time. Despised Hume. Kant attempted to correct the impractical features of both rationalism and empiricism. Rationalism can involve on the manipulation of concepts, and empiricism confines knowledge to sensory experience and its derivatives. Kant attempted to reconcile both points of view. Kant reasoned that that there must be innate categories of thought – These categories of thought, or “faculties,” are neither part of our sensory experience not derived from it. If these thoughts are not the result of sensory experience, then they are innate categories of thought .
  • 18. John Stuart Mill Accepting the notion that complex ideas are made up of simpler ideas, mill added the notion that some simple ideas combine into a new totality that may bear little resemblance to its parts. For example, if we combine blue, red, and green lights, we get white. In other words, Mill believed that the whole is different from the sum of its parts . Thus Mill modified the empiricist contention that all ideas reflect sensory stimulation. For him, when some ideas combine they produce an idea that is unlike any of the elemental ideas that make up the emergent idea.
  • 19. Thomas Reid Reid: Scottish philosopher of common sense who opposed the ideas of David Hume (1710-1796) Reid believed that the mind has powers of its own, which strongly influence how we perceive the world. He hypothesized twenty-seven faculties of the mind, most of which were thought to be innate. The belief in the existence of such faculties in the mind was latter called faculty psychology. Faculty psychology is a view of the mind as having separate modules or faculties assigned to various mental tasks. The view is implicit in Franz Joseph Gall's formulation of phrenology, the disreputed practice of measuring personality traits by measuring bumps on one's head. Naive Realism The philosophical view that perception accurately portrays all objects and events in the world. In philosophy naive realism is used to describe the belief that physical objects continue to exist when they are no longer perceived. It can be contrasted with solipsism.
  • 20. Phrenology - is the long practiced study of head formations. An early nineteenth-century fad that involved palpating bumps and indentations on the head in order to judge the examinee’s intellectual and personality traits. A forerunner of modern theories of cerebral localization, phrenology nonetheless had no validity. Belief that there is a relationship between mental attributes and the shape of the head. Started in 1800 by Franz Gall and Johann Spurzheim that the brain was divided into areas of self-esteem, destructiveness, etc. For a while it was fashionable for people to go and have their bumps read. Phrenology is a theory which claims to be able to determine character and personality traits and criminality on the basis of the shape of the head (reading "bumps"). Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall around 1800, and very popular in the 19th century, it is now discredited as a pseudoscience. Franz Joseph Gall First, he assumed that the faculties were housed in specific locations in the brain. Second, he believed that the faculties of the mind did not exist to the same extent in every individual. Third, he believed that if a faculty was well developed, there would be a bump or protrusion on the part of the skull corresponding to the place in the brain that houses that faculty. Likewise is a faculty was poorly developed, a hollow or depression would be found on the skull. Franz Joseph Gall (March 9, 1758 - August 22, 1828) was a German neuroanatomist and physiologist who was a pioneer in the study of the localization of mental functions in the brain.
  • 21. Charles Darwin Charles Darwin, a British naturalist, revolutionized biology with his theory of evolution through the process of NATURAL SELECTION. He also made significant contributions to the fields of natural history and geology. The theory of evolution, which held that all living species have evolved from preexisting forms, aroused great controversy and brought about a reevaluation of the position of humans in relation to all other living forms.
  • 22. Hermann Ebbinghaus A German psychologist who pioneered experimental study of memory, and discovered the forgetting curve. Invented his own “nonsense material” which consists of syllables containng a vowel between town consonants (e.g., QAW, JIG, XUW, CEW, or TEB). The syllables were not the nonsense, It was the relationships among the syllables that were meaningless. Thus we use the term nonsense material instead of nonsense syllables. How many exposures to learn something.. And how many to go back to and remember it (savings)
  • 23. Voluntarism Theory that God or the ultimate nature of reality is conceived as some form of will. the doctrine that will is the basic factor, both in the universe and in human conduct. The concept that belief is a matter of the will.
  • 24. Apperception introspective self-consciousness Perception as modified and enhanced by one's own emotions, memories, and biases. The appreciation of objects or ideas in their entire significance, as they are related to all other objects or ideas, including the mind, which is thus considering them. Physiologically, apperception is the consciousness associated with the activities of the intermediate areas, both anterior and posterior, as these are affected by the activities of the sensory overflow areas. It is evident that a very nice balancing of the impulses to and from the different areas is required in order that these different activities may be coordinated; therefore apperception is a function only of neurons well developed and well related in development Apperception is realized when man's ability to think judges one thing by another and draws conclusions. Thus, the other thing is established in the mind. The objects of apperception are of different kinds. Some of them concern things that are certain by nature. Others concern things that are hypothetical in various degrees. Apperception ultimately reverts to perception because the only purpose of having apperception is to achieve knowledge of the realities of things. The process of going from perception over to apperception and back again is therefore continuous.
  • 25. The elements of thought could be willfully arranged in any number of combinations. It is this emphasis on will that his school or psychology is called voluntarism. Creative Synthesis
  • 26. Structuralism is a psychological approach that emphasized studying the elemental structures of consciousness the view that behind the social and cultural realities we perceive, such as clothes or food fashions, kinship organization and even language itself, deep structures exist which, through combinations of their elements, produce the surface complexity of the relevant phenomena. Poststructuralism retains elements of structuralism (its interest in surface signs for example) but abandons the quest for deep structures. Introspection was a major tool used in structuralism. Trained to report immediate experience . To name the object (called a stimulus error ).
  • 27. Functionalism the theory that all elements of a culture are functional in that they serve to satisfy culturally defined needs of the people in that society or requirements of the society as a whole.
  • 28. William James Founder of the functionalist movement.
  • 29. John Watson / Behaviorism A branch of psychology that bases its observations and conclusions on definable and measurable behavior and on experimental methods, rather than on concept of "mind.“ Behaviorism is a psychological theory first put forth by John Watson (1925), and then expounded upon by BF Skinner. Attempting to answer the question of human behavior, proponents of this theory essentially hold that all human behavior is learned from one's surrounding context and environment.