Category: Archive

Things written when I was younger and dumber.

Jung-the unconcious explorer

While most psychologists I’ve written about so far are either strongly scientific or strongly against science, Jung is somewhere inbetween. In his early years, he tried to study very unscientific things such as dreams in a scientific way, so still considered himself a scientist despite being a psychodynamic psychologist.

One of the most famous pairings in psychology is the meeting of minds between Freud and Jung. The first time they met, while both studying schizophrenia, they reportedly talked for 13 hours straight. They joined forces, developing a  father-son relationship- Jung became the crown prince to Freud’s kingdom of psychoanalysis.

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History of Psychology – Introducing Freud…

If James and Wundt are the fathers of psychology, Freud can best be described as psychology’s slightly senile great-uncle.

A surprising thing about Freud is that he originally intended to be a medical psychopathologist, and was only directed towards his famous approach by his mentor Joseph Breuer. Breuer and Freud collaborated studying “Anna O.”, who developed many different hysterical symptoms after caring for her ill father for months. They found she would go into states that looked like trances and during them would recall memories related to her current symptoms. The symptoms would then disappear afterwards, to be replaced by new ones. Anna called this “chimney sweeping”, and this treatment was probably what inspired Freud to keep studying the hysterical, irrational aspects of the mind.

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History of Psychology – William James

The second “father of experimental psychology” was American doctor and philosopher William James. James viewed psychology as a natural science, believing in the same way as Wundt that feelings and reasonings could be analysed by their smaller features. However, James is regarded as the founder of Functionalism, the second psychological school of thought, not as a Structuralist.

Functionalism started from the same point as, and was a reaction to, Structuralism. Functionalism was slightly different because it focused on the purpose and adaptation of consciousness rather than just the process of breaking it into smaller elements.

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History of Psychology – The First Psychologist?

While the mind as a philosophical subject has been around since ancient cultures,attempts to study it scientifically didn’t become widespread until the 1800s.

The person who first began to study psychology using experiments and research was Wilhelm Wundt, known as one of the two the “fathers of experimental Psychology”-the other being William James. As well as psychology, Wundt studied philosophy, physics and physiology – his work in all of those areas can be seen as “foundationalist”, meaning he tried to find the basic beliefs in each discipline that everything else is based on. His ideas were often drawn from philosophers, so used concepts such as materialism and idealism.

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Audience Participation Required…

Instead of a normal blog post, this is a vote post.

While researching my intended next post, I ended up going in lots of directions at once, and now don’t know which to follow, so I thought I’d ask the people who are hopefully going to read it, and see which you would be intetested in.

Anyhow, here are your three current options, although other suggestions are always welcome.

1) A history of famous psychologists series
2) A cognitive bias series (cognitive biases are errors in the way we percieve/interpret the world, and things that happen to us)
3) A crash-course in psychological approaches.

Happy voting!

Psychiatry, Burnout and Dictatorship, Pt.2

Here is Pt.1, if you’ve arrived at this one first.

In the first post on this topic, I wrote about my reading on the Burnout Cycle and Compassion Fatigue, and how I saw a link between this combination and the consequences of dictatorship. So now I’ll explain the details of the burnout cycle and show how they can be observed to an extent in some previous dictatorships.

The term “burnout” describes a form of exhaustion caused by high stress levels, most commonly from workplace stress. The cycle of burnout has 12 phases, which are categorised as mild, moderate or severe .

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The Incompetency Paradox

Yesterday I was thinking about gender biases and sexism, and noticed that even though there are laws enforcing male-female equality and people are being taught not to be sexist,  there is still a big number imbalance in terms of careers. Even now, fewer women than men reach powerful careers, and those that do continue to be paid less. This led me to wondering if there is an explanation that doesn’t rely on believing everything is sexist- obviously for me, that went straight to thinking of psychological reasons. And I think I might have found one based on a combination of psychological effects.

First is the Dunning-Kruger effect, the idea that people who are incompetent (in this context, unskilled at their job) will have unconscious biases in their thought patterns in three different ways;
1) They will over-estimate their own level of skill
2) They will under-estimate or ignore other people’s skill
3) They won’t recognise when they are incompetent.

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Psychiatry, Burnout, and Dictatorship, Pt.1

This is a two part blog, as I somehow managed to think of two only partially connected things at the same time, which came from spending most of last week finishing a century- and discipline-spanning essay. During my research last week I found two realisations/theories, the first of which is being written about today. This is about how I underestimated late 19th/early 20th century psychiatrists and owe them an apology, and also how their experience could be linked to why political leaders become dictators.

Some background for this story; the report was on the history of psychiatry, and how it had pretty much broken by the end of the 19th century. So many people were being put in asylums that psychiatrists couldn’t treat them in the humane ways they had planned to and ended up being just as cruel as they had been 100 years earlier.

Before this week, this had always been really confusing; while I could understand that the level of care dropped because of overcrowding, I couldn’t understand how the psychiatrists could change their hearts so quickly. It made no sense that psychiatrists could finally gain compassion for their patients and for the first time believed they could be healed, only to quickly return to seeing them as animals, detached from all of their dignity and respect. When I first heard about this my reaction was, to be honest, kind of hatred for them for being able to turn their backs on their patients and ignore their humanity, especially after they had already known it.

It was only after thinking about it a bit more that I realised things weren’t that simple- the collapse of humane treatments was not just a setback, it crushed the hopes and ideals of a generation of humanist psychiatrists who were trying to convince everyone that the mentally ill still had souls. It isn’t difficult to imagine the psychological effects of having such an idealistic and strived-for goal crushed in that way; made even worse because its downfall was created by its previous success, meaning the humanists would never be able to achieve what they had aimed in their lifetimes.

Based on this, it is also not difficult to see the impact this would have on the individual humanists; my theory is that in today’s terms they would probably have developed a form of psychological burnout known as compassion fatigue. Some of the results of this are hopelessness, negativity, and eventually cynicism towards people’s suffering- which matches the neglect and lack of care shown to patients, and the cynical, nihilistic attitude towards trying to cure their illnesses. The leading view after humanist methods collapsed was known as “theraputic nihilsm”, basically the belief that mental illness could not be cured and people couldn’t be changed, which is more support.

An extension of this theory could explain a proportion of one of the most difficult to understand groups of people in society- dictators, e.g. those who take sole control over a country in an attempt to improve it, but end up lowering their populations quality of life, even to the point of committing atrocities. Said theory and extension will be written about in pt.2

Is the human mind the strangest thing in the universe?

Philosophers and scientists have both said for a very long time that the mind is a confusing thing. I think a good place to start which agrees with this is Emerson M Pugh’s quote:

“If the human brain was simple enough for us to understand, we would be too simple to understand it” .

This brings to mind Zeno’s paradox about Achilles and the Tortoise, with the brain as the Tortoise and human understanding as Achilles, developing as fast as it can only to arrive at a great understanding and realise the tortoise was already there.

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Education system thoughts 2: The flaws of the “English Baccalaureate”

This is following on from the previous blog about GCSE and A-level exams.

In the previous post I mentioned how large numbers of students are failing the “traditional” subjects, such as English, Maths and Science. This has led to the construction of the new “English Bacc”, which tracks the number of students getting a good GCSE in English, Maths, Science, a humanity and a language. News stories have also criticised the new Applied GCSEs, and how they can be worth up to 4 “traditional” GCSES.

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