|
|||||
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Lesson
23
GESTALT
PSYCHOLOGY
Wolfgang
Kohler (1880-1943)
Wolfgang
Kohler
Wolfgang
Kohler was born in 1880
and he died in 1943. He was a German
but is known mostly as
an
American psychologist because he worked
in America. From 1913 to
1920 he was director of a
research
station
at Tenerife, Germany. Later he served as
both professor of psychology
and director of the
Psychology
Institute, Berlin. He came to the
United States in 1934, where
he became professor of
psychology
at Swarthmore College. Köhler is
best known for his
experiments with problem-solving in
apes
at
Tenerife and the influence of his
writings in the founding of the school of Gestalt
psychology. His
writings
include Gestalt Psychology and The
Mentality of Apes.
Kohler's
main contribution in the Gestalt School
is his discovery of learning by insight.
He
conducted
experiments on monkey and saw
that monkeys were able to
solve their problems
through
insight.
He saw that monkeys were
able to attach sticks together to
reach far off objects
which they thought
was
food. They would also
pile up boxes to reach high
places if they wanted to.
Kohler concluded that
learning
takes place by insight. Monkeys
thought about what to do first
and then performed the action.
Based
on this observation, Kohler concluded
trial and error as a method
of learning.
Kohler
also postulated the concept of
isomorphism which means that
there is kind of a mental
map
of
the objects in environment, and this
mental map helps in learning by insight.
This means that in the
mind
of
individuals, there is a map which
according to him is the explanation of the things
around him. In other
words,
the map is the individual's perception
about the world around him. This
concept was called
isomorphism
by Kohler. These were some
of the contributions of Wolfgang
Kohler.
52
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Kurt
Koffka (1886-1941)
Kurt
Koffka
The
other prominent contributor in the
Gestalt school was Kurt
Koffka who was born in
1886 and
died
in 1941. He was an American psychologist
but was born in Germany. Before settling
permanently in
the
United States in 1928 as a
professor at Smith, he taught at Cornell
and at the Univ. of Wisconsin.
With
Max
Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler he is
credited with developing the theories
that gave rise to the
school
of Gestalt psychology. His book Growth of
the Mind (1924) was
considered responsible
for
awakening
much interest in Gestalt
concepts.
Koffka's
concept of field theory was
an important concept of the Gestalt
school. He distinguished
between
the geographical field and the
field of experience. Geographical field
is the actual environment
while
the field of experience is the mindset of
the observer. Humans react to the
field of experience and
not
to
the geographical field. The
geographical field is the actual
field which represents the
real world around.
The
field of experience represents the
experiences or the dispositions of the person
who experiences the
field.
For example, if a person
goes for a walk in the garden
and he knows that there have
been witnesses of
snakes
in that garden, he is quite
likely to confuse a twig
with a snake. This means
that the person has
actually
considered only the field of
experience and ignored the geographical
field or the reality. This is
what
Koffka
tried to explain. In his views, an
individual tends to ignore the
geographical field in face of the
field
of
experience which dominates
his understanding or perceptions. The
field of experience in the
above
example
may have been established by
someone telling the person
that there are snakes in the
garden or
some
previous incidents of snake sighting that
the person might have heard
of. These were some of
the
contributions
of Kurt Koffka.
Productive
or Problem Solving Thinking:
Mihály
Csíkszentmihályi
Productive
thinking or problem solving thinking
and learning by insight has been
explained very thoroughly
by
two psychologists, one in America
and the other in the European Continent.
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi,
born
in 1934, is a psychology professor at
Claremont Graduate University in Claremont, California
and is
the
former head of the department of
psychology at the University of Chicago.
He is noted for his work
in
the
study of happiness, creativity,
subjective well-being, and fun,
but is best known as the
architect of the
notion
of flow and for his
years of research and
writing on the topic. He is the author of
many books and
over
120 articles or book
chapters. He interviewed and studied
over two thousand creative
people and
discovered
some common elements in them.
Some of those were; smart
and naďve, playful and
disciplined,
humble
and proud, having great
physical energy etc. Martin
Seligman, former president of the
American
Psychological
Association, described Csikszentmihalyi as the world's
leading researcher on
positive
53
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
psychology.
He is one of the most widely
cited psychologists today, in a variety
of fields related to
psychology
and business.
Edward
De Bono
The
European who is famous in this regard is
Edward De Bono (born in May
19, 1933) who was
at
Cambridge
University and developed his
theory of Lateral Thinking which is
akin to creative or
problem
solving
thinking. He developed some exercises to
inculcate lateral thinking.
Some of his exercises
are,
"question"
"rotate," discover "dominant
idea" etc. Edward de Bono is a
psychologist and physician.
De
Bono
writes prolifically on subjects of
lateral thinking, a concept he is
believed to have pioneered. De
Bono
is
also a consultant who has
worked with companies such
as Coca-cola and Ericsson. In
1979 he co-
founded
the School of Thinking with Dr
Michael Hewitt-Gleeson.
54
Table of Contents:
|
|||||