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kaze
1 day ago
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kaze
Cognitive psychology explores how we think, remember, learn, and perceive the world. Its history is a fascinating journey from ancient philosophy to modern science.
The seeds were planted over 2,000 years ago. Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle pondered memory, reasoning, and the mind’s structure. Later, in the 17th century, René Descartes proposed the mind-body dualism idea, suggesting the mind (conscious thought) and body (physical mechanics) interact but operate separately. By the late 1800s, Wilhelm Wundt established the first psychology lab in Germany, using introspection—where trained subjects described their thoughts during tasks—to map mental processes.
In the early 1900s, psychology shifted focus. John B. Watson argued that studying invisible "mental events" was unscientific. Instead, behaviorism emerged, emphasizing only observable actions (like pressing levers for food rewards). B.F. Skinner later reinforced this, showing how rewards and punishments shape behavior. For decades, behaviorism dominated, sidelining discussions about the mind itself.
By the 1950s, cracks in behaviorism appeared. Scientists realized it couldn’t explain complex human abilities like language or problem-solving. Key sparks ignited change:
Psychologists like George Miller and Ulric Neisser began designing experiments to study memory, attention, and decision-making directly. Neisser’s 1967 book Cognitive Psychology gave the field its name and identity.
By the 1970s, cognitive psychology was mainstream. Brain-scanning tools (like fMRI) later allowed scientists to link mental processes to physical brain activity, bridging gaps between mind and biology. This history shows how curiosity about the "inner world" endured, reshaping psychology forever.