home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.psychology
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ames!pacbell.com!rtech!ingres!jpk
- From: jpk@Ingres.COM (Jon Krueger)
- Subject: Re: historical effects on psychology
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.063238.3751@pony.Ingres.COM>
- Reply-To: jpk@Ingres.COM (Jon Krueger)
- Organization: Ingres Corporation, a subsidiary of The ASK Group, Inc.
- References: <771@muller.loria.fr>
- Date: 23 Jan 93 06:32:38 GMT
- Lines: 19
-
- Frederic Alexandre writes:
- > effects of the historical context on psychologist theories
-
- A turn of the century science watcher (Chesterton?) pointed out that,
- according to the accounts, German rats sat and thought and then acted
- decisively, whereas American rats ran in circles until they stumbled
- on the answer. A better example you're not going to find.
-
- Another fun example is Pavlov himself, who "held the view that
- conditioned reflexes, although manifestly a behavioral phenomeon, were
- of interest for understanding of the brain" (Millenson and Leslie,
- Principles of Behavioral Analysis, 1979).
-
- Historical context ("zeitgeist") is well known to affect the conduct
- of science. Psychology is no exception.
-
- -- Jon
- --
- Jon Krueger jpk@ingres.com
-