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History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Lesson
13
IMPACT
OF PHYSICAL SCIENCES ON
PSYCHOLOGY
As the
thinking of man went through
various phases of development, psychology
also underwent
developments.
By the end of the 19th century and the beginning
of the 20th century, the world
and
particularly
Europe, had witnessed three
earth-shaking events in the last
two hundred years. The
first one
was
the French revolution which
had resulted in abolishment of feudalism
and monarchy, setting an
example
for Europe and the world to
follow. This revolution had a
great impact on thinking of
man. On
the
other hand the industrial revolution of
the 18th century was another ground
breaking event of the same
era.
The Industrial revolution in England,
Europe, America and Japan had
replaced much of manual
labor
with
machines. New towns were
established. The third event
was the Soviet Revolution in
Russia. In Russia
the
Bolshevik party had overthrown the
monarchy, ended feudalism and
abolished the concept of
private
property.
All means of production were
nationalized and owned by the state
meaning that Socialism
was
established
in the state.
The
impact of these three events
was that the industrialization
spread giving rise to an
attitude of
encouragement
of new ideas, initiative and
stress on research. Keeping this
brief background in view, let
us
see
what impact some physical
sciences had on psychology by
looking at the contributions of two
scientists.
Charles
Darwin
One
of the most important scientists of the
19th century was Charles Darwin.
He was born in 1809
in
England. He got education there
and undertook research in
Botany, Zoology or Biology.
Therefore,
Darwin
was basically a man of
physical sciences rather that
psychology but as we shall
see, Darwin related
his
theories of physical sciences
with psychology. Darwin died in
1882.
Charles
Darwin traveled and conducted
experiments in many parts of the
world. He collected
samples
of plants and observed
animals. He discovered that
animals in one part of the
world were different
from
other parts of the world,
but in areas where the
conditions were similar, the animals
were also similar.
He
noted this particularly in tortoise. Based
upon his extensive research
and observation he proposed that
man
can be studied the same way
as we can study
animals.
One
of the greatest contributions of Charles
Darwin is that he put
forward the view that life
and
survival
in the world requires constant
struggle and battle against hostile
forces. He stated that only
those
organisms
survive who can fight the battle
and win while weak
organisms perish. This is the law of
the
nature.
This law is called "Survival
of the Fittest" which was given by Darwin
in an article written by
him.
Relating
it to psychology, Darwin said that
psychology is a study of tactics of
organism for survival
and
emotions
are an important factor for
survival of the organisms. This means
that organisms use
their
emotions
to accomplish the task of fighting
against the hostile environment and
forces.
For
example, when an animal
shows its teeth to a predator in anger,
the predator is scared. The
animal
is actually expressing its
emotions. The emotions may
merely to scare the enemy. On the
other hand,
when
an animal screams or cries, it is
actually calling others for help.
Therefore, according to Darwin, this
is
how
organisms use emotions to survive in the battle of
nature. Darwin was able to
relate the battle for
survival
in the nature with the psychology of the
organism. This reflects his
aim of discovering the
link
between
physiology and psychology.
Another
contribution of Charles Darwin is he
put forward the view that
environment plays a
dominant
role in determining the psychology of a
person. This means that the
environment, in which a
person
lives, influences his
thinking, his imagination, the way he
behaves and his overall
personality. This
proposition
of Darwin gave rise to the
nature versus nurture controversy;
which means that it is
quite
uncertain
that whether it is the nature that
shapes the thinking and
behavior of a human being or it is
the
bringing
up that shapes it. Therefore,
man's thinking is either a product of the
environment that he lives
in,
31
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
or
the training that is imparted onto
him. It was later proved
that there was a lot of
truth in what Darwin
proclaimed.
Gustav
Fechner
Another
scientist belonging to the world of
physical sciences whose
thinking had an impact on
the
development
of psychology was Gustav Fechner. He
was a German physicist, who
was born in 1801
and
died
in 1887.
Fechner
is known for devising ways
of measuring psychological experiences in
physical terms,
called
psycho-physics methods. Psycho-physics
methods are methods in which
Fechner proposed to
measure
what a person was experiencing
psychologically. The measurement was in
physical terms using
laws
of
physics. This was one of the
most important contributions of
Fechner, apart from other
noteworthy
contributions.
In
order to explain the relationship between
psychological experiences and
their physical
measurement,
Fechner proposed the concept of
"Sensory Threshold". According to
Fechner, sensory
threshold
is the minimum stimulation required by a
sense organ to register a
stimulus. This means that,
to
which
intensity of the stimulus the sensory
organs of body would be able
to acknowledge the existence of
that
stimulus. For example at
which level of volume, a human ear
would be able to detect
sound.
Fechner
went on to identify the "Absolute
threshold" which is a stimulus value
that evokes a
response
50% of the times. This means
that when a stimulus is given
repeatedly for 100 times, if
it evokes a
response
50 times, that is the absolute
threshold.
Fechner
also identified the "Differential
threshold" which is the stimulus
value where one
stimulus
is
regarded as different from another
stimulus 50% of the time. This means
that when two similar
stimuli
are
given repeatedly 100 times, the
difference is noted 50 times. This is the
differential threshold. Fechner
also
devised the method of measuring the
absolute threshold; it is called the method of
minimal changes.
Because
of these contributions, particularly
because of his inventions of
methods of measuring
psychological
experience in physical terms he
has been called the father
of psychophysics.
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