Dear colleagues:

I apologize if my writing English is not so good, but I would like to share
a few words on this debate, considering  it is related to my own field of
research, the history of psychology.

May be the point in the discussion about consider Wundt a structuralist or
not, is related to the different approaches and sources used by historians
of psychology and by the authors of Introductory Textbooks.

I remember and interesting paper published in *Teaching of Psychology* by
David Zehr. Zehr precisely examined why introductory textbooks
misunderstood the differences between Wundt and Titchener. Zehr stated:
"some authors of current introductory psychology texts misrepresents the
relation between the psychologies of Wundt and Titchener. Titchener's
system is usually and appriopriately labeled as strcuturalism, but
depictions of Wundtian psychology are frequently incorrect. Specifically,
some authors continue to mislabel Wundt as a structuralist" (Zehr, 2000, p.
124).

The problem is that up-to-date research on history of Psychology is not
included in most introductory textbooks, even in very good introductory
textbooks. Following Paul Forman and Kurt Danziger is possible to argue
that such characteristic is because history of psychology mainly play a
celebratory and pedagogical functions within psychologist's socialization.

"New" history of Psychology, as Chris introduced, is not well-known among
psychologists and students in undergraduate or even graduate programs. I
guess it is neccesary to reduce the gap between historians of psychology
and psychologists or historians or authors of introductory textbooks. But,
as Zehr explained, it is not easy.

Sincerely yours
Hugo

--------------------------------
*Dr. Hugo Klappenbach*
Universidad Nacional de San Luis (UNSL), Argentina
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET)
Avenida Ejercito de los Andes 950, IV Bloque, Oficina 71
D5700HHW San Luis, Argentina
TE: 54 - 266 - 443 5512, Interno 121
FAX: 54 - 266 - 443 0224
E-mail: [email protected]
           [email protected]


2012/6/17 mjchael sylvester <[email protected]>

> **
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  Whereas Chris may be correct in pointing to Titchener as the
> quintessential structuralist,most textbooks and the GRE during my college
> days list Wundt as belonging to the structuralism paradigmfew.I think
> that Dave Myers list him under structuralism,but do not quote me on
> this.Granting that Wundt did not buy the introspection method,the idea of
> digging into the nature of mind and its impact on behavior has been a
> dominant theme in the European schools of psychology.As a matter of
> fact schools of psychology emanating from Europe
> have been on a mind trip:
> structuralism,gestalt,psychoanalysis,exixtentialism,
> phenomenology,traits (Eysenck,Cattell),intelligence testing
> (Binet),Piagetism,logotherapy, Aldous Huxley-to mention
> just a few. And  not even psychophysics was  an aberration from this
> mental trend with conepts
> like absolute threshold,relative threshold and Jnd with  dependcy  on
> subjective verbal reports.
>
> When I was an undergraduate at Gannon University,my experimental text was
> by Zimny
> which was really a text of psychophysical methods
> depedent on subjective responses.
> Just because experiments are done in a lab at Leipzig or anywhere else
> do not exclude a subjective evaluative response
> component.
>
> Wundt had an interest in cross-cultural psychology.But I am unable to
> elaborate
> since I do not read German.Wundt might have been
> the first cross-cultural dude.
>
> Michael 'omnicentric' Sylvester,PhD
> Daytona Beach,Florida
>
>

---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [email protected].
To unsubscribe click here: 
http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df5d5&n=T&l=tips&o=18463
or send a blank email to 
leave-18463-13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df...@fsulist.frostburg.edu

Reply via email to