Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K (second edition) - a summary
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Foundation of psychology
Chapter 13
Psychology and society
Science overtakes religion in Western society
Initial strong links between psychological thinking and religion
Psychology as a separate branch of knowledge grew out of the rising role of scientific thinking in Western society.
Education for a long time was controlled by the churches, which did not look favourably upon those who tried to examine the soul.
Many early psychologists had strong connections with religion.
Alliance formation with the expanding sciences
Rapidly, the experimental psychologists distanced themselves from religion, because it jeopardies their scientific credentials.
They sought to align themselves with the rapidly growing natural sciences, by denouncing weaker fields that might contaminate them, such as religion, philosophy, and sociology.
Psychologists replace pastors
Fewer people felt comfortable discussing their mental health problems with religious authorities.
Whereas for a long time churches were the first port to call for mental health problems, growing secularisation increased the need for non-religious counselling.
At the same time, a growing number of clergy started to study psychology to improve the help they were able to provide.
Changes in society impinge on psychological practice
Impact on psychological research
The massive changes in the organisation of Western society in the nineteenth and twentieth century generated ideas and research opportunities for psychologists.
Six historical developments that affected psychological research
Societal influences were not limited to the science-oriented track of psychology, but also shaped thought in the hermeneutic part.
Impact on clinical practice
Changes in society influenced clinical practice.
Mental disorders show cultural variation.
This is not only true between cultures, but also across time within a culture.
Each culture has a symptom pool, a collective memory of how to behave when ill.
At each time period patients with psychological problems gravitate towards the symptoms that at the time are thought to be legitimate indications of disease, as no patients wants to select illegitimate symptoms.
Society as a metaphor provider
Metaphors: in science, stands for an analogy from another area that helps to map a new, complex problem by making reference to a better understood phenomenon.
The wider world has influenced psychology by the provision of metaphors.
Examples of metaphors in psychology
Psychologists have used four types of metaphors:
The power of metaphors
Metaphors in science are not just comparisons.
They allow researchers to formulate an test hypotheses on the basis of the analogy, which otherwise would have remained elusive.
Metaphors work because they transfer a complex knowledge system from a known theme to an unknown topic.
At the same time, they include a danger, because often the phenomenon to be understood does not completely fit into the metaphor.
The metaphor does not replace reality, it only allows the researchers to get a grasp of some aspects of the phenomenon.
Throughout history, scientific innovations have been a source of metaphors to understand the mechanisms of the mind.
By applying them, psychologists got a better grip on the phenomena they tried to understand.
At the same time, metaphors restrict understanding, because the phenomenon to be explained is rarely exactly the same as the analogy used
Socio-political biases in psychological theories
Scientific research does not happen in a void but is influenced by the culture in which the researchers live.
Even measurements and data are not safe in the light of strong socio-politico opinions. Gould vs. Morton
Gould
Showed how easy ‘objective’ findings can be distorted by the researchers’ expectations.
The observation that the same data set can lead to different conclusions is a useful reminder of the fact that data collection and measurement involve selection and interpretation, which make scientific conclusions open to socio-political influences.
Money and Ehrhardt (1972). The trainability of gender identity
Socio-political biases in scientific conclusions are not limited to the biological perspective.
An example of current social influences: hidden racism
Hidden racism: advancing one’s own race by non-conspicuous biases against other groups (usually by ignoring their contribution).
Socio-political influences on psychological practice
The socio-political contexts also influences the conditions under which psychologists work.
An increased interest in ethical issues
One of the developments of the last decades is an increased concern for ethical issues.
Two big social changes lie at the heart of this shift
Litigation and importance of documented evidence
The same biases apply to all kinds of knowledge and the non-scientific approaches have fewer defences against them.
Mechanisms that allow others to evaluate the claims researchers make and present counter-evidence
Because of these requirements, scientific knowledge is among the most trustworthy we have.
Psychologists as pawns in power games
Psychologists as a group are entangled in the struggle for power in various groups.
They try to improve their standing by manipulating other, but at the same time are constantly being used by other groups as part of their power struggle.
Foucault and the power of discipline
Michel Foucault (1926-1984)
Published a book in which he discussed how rules discipline their inferiors
Within Foucault’s world view, the primary role of psychologists is to help with the surveillance of mental health patients, students, employees and everyone else they are asked to assess and advise.
The main task of psychologists is not to help clients, but to keep them in line with the prevailing social organisation.
Foucault’s view on madness
Foucault described how societies need outcasts, because their exclusion makes everyone else feel better.
The misuse of psychological knowledge by pseudoscientists
Another way in which psychologists have been used by society is that their knowledge has been hijacked by groups who did not subscribe to the scientific ethos.
Psychological knowledge has been recycled by individuals who were not primarily interested in the truth of the findings, but in the extent in which they advanced their own case.
The essential element of pseudo-psychology is that evidence-based statements are freely combined with made-up statements, statements from dubious sources and statements that are known to be wrong.
In most countries the problem is not that existing psychologists are abusing their powers, but to protect clients from bogus therapists.
The misuse of psychological knowledge in times of war
Psychological knowledge may become misused against people by psychologists themselves.
Interim summary
The ways in which society has influenced psychology
The psychologisation of society
The impact psychology has on the way in which people interact is enormous.
Psychologisation: word used in two different meanings
Psychology has changed how people perceive each other
Labels introduced by psychology become real
Many of the concepts through which people differentiate themselves come from psychological writings.
Many psychological concepts became part of everyday life, once they had been coined.
Labels introduced by psychology change the subject of psychology
The introduction of new concepts by psychology not only changes the social reality for other people but also for psychologists.
New psychology students wrongly believe that the concepts currently used in psychology and the wider culture refer to ‘natural personal qualities’, which have always been there and not to qualities that, to some extent, are the result of prior developments in psychological research.
As a result of previous research the subject matter observed by psychologists today is different from the subject matter observed in the past.
Psychological labels are to some extent arbitrary
New psychological concepts not only make new realities, but also define them in arbitrary ways, because the concepts have been introduced without a good understanding of what was involved.
Society adapts to the label
Once a psychological label has become reality, society starts to adapt itself to the new measure, thereby further increasing the reality of the concept.
Psychologists make friends
Educational psychology
The first group that welcomed input from psychology was the educationalists.
Psychologists swiftly became involved in educational matters.
Psychologists and teachers agreed that psychology was a core component of a teacher’s qualification.
In addition, psychology started to introduce intelligence tests in schools and began to lobby for school counsellors.
Advising parents
From its stronghold in schools, it was a small step to also raid the fledgling literature of parenting.
Psychologists create needs
Institutions for monopolies by creating needs
Once a new section of society is established, they try to increase their slice of the economy by creating new needs.
Illich’s account of medicine
Illich argues that the medical and pharmaceutical worlds enormously overstate their significance for the health of people.
The extension to psychology
According to sociologists, psychologists are not in the first place interested in helping people, but in creating needs so that they can expand their industry.
Psychologists promote values
Psychologists spread Western views of wellness and healing around the world
Psychologists, together with medical practitioners, contribute to spreading the therapeutic ethos across the world.
Psychologists are not politically neutral
Psychologists within the Western world are not politically neural.
Although psychologist celebrate diversity, recognize the value and legitimacy of diverse beliefs and by their own admission strive to be inclusive, conservatives are a vastly under-represented and marginalised minority in psychology.
As a consequence of their bias, psychology departments are a force in the promotion of left and liberal values in the society.
Redding (2001)
The liberal bias of psychologists has consequences for psychology’s standing in society
Psychology increases the weight of science in the competition with the humanities
Psychology as a discipline has largely promoted the virtues of the scientific approach and downplayed the contribution of the humanities.
Many psychology researchers in their communication with the general public stress the superiority of their findings relative to common knowledge, because their findings are based on scientific evidence.
Psychologists are not neutral to religion
Psychologists tend to have rather sceptical views about religion.
Few psychologists are able to see religion as a source giving meaning to life and adversity.
Even if psychologists do not talk openly about their religious views, in subtle ways their attitudes impose values on people they work with
Interim summary
Critical views about the ways in which psychology has influenced society
Interim summary
To what extent is the psychologisation of society steered by psychologists?
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This is a summary of the book: Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K. This book is about the history of Psychology and how now-day psychology came to be. The book is used in the course 'Foundations of psychology' at the second year of
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