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What is Psychology?

Pursuing an undergraduate degree in psychology is a fantastic way to gain general insight into human beings and can provide a foundation for graduate coursework in psychology as well as a launching pad for other careers with intensive human interaction, such as legal studies, education, or counseling. It is important for aspiring psychology students to realize that a bachelor’s level degree in psychology is not generally going to be sufficient to do actual field work as a psychologist, because research, clinical, and counseling positions all require additional education. In fact, a psychologist must have a doctoral degree. However, the knowledge and skills acquired in a psychology undergraduate program are critical for pursuing that additional education.

According to the American Psychological Association, “Psychology is the study of the mind and behavior. The discipline embraces all aspects of the human experience — from the functions of the brain to the actions of nations, from child development to care for the aged. In every conceivable setting from scientific research centers to mental healthcare services, ‘the understanding of behavior’ is the enterprise of psychologists.” In other words, while many people think of psychology as focusing on abnormal psychology and psychopathology, the reality is that much of psychology focuses on normal human behavior. This approach is logical, since it is impossible to identify whether behavior is abnormal without knowing what normal human behavior is. Moreover, psychologists and other mental health professionals cannot help clients identify whether behaviors are adaptive or maladaptive without knowing the range of human behavior.

Understanding normal versus abnormal psychology requires an understanding of the normal curve, a term used to describe the distribution of the particular construct being described in the population at large. In fact, while many people think of psychology as a “soft science,” much of modern psychological theory has developed through very specific testing. As a result, an understanding of statistics and the scientific method are both critical for anyone studying psychology. The scientific method is used in psychology not only to help describe behaviors, but also with the goal of predicting those behaviors. Important components of the scientific method are: the hypothesis; independent and dependent variables; and operational definitions. Psychology students must also understand: univariate and multivariate research designs; data analysis; and qualitative and quantitative designs.

In addition, most people who study psychology spend time learning about the history of psychology. While not all psychologists endorse the theories of those who are considered founders of the field, there is no denying the important role that these men and women played in describing human behavior. Some important figures in psychology include: Franz Mesmer, Philippe Pinel, Charles Darwin, G. Stanley Hall, Wilhelm Wundt, Sigmund Freud, Sir Francis Galton, William James, Alfred Binet, Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, John Watson, Rosalie Rayner, Carl Rogers, Jean Piaget, Karen Horney, Erik Erikson, and B.F. Skinner. Studying these figures highlights several factors about psychology. First, a psychology student needs to understand history and sociology, because historical attitudes influenced controversial psychological theories like eugenics. Second, there is no single accepted psychological theory that can be said to describe any aspect of human growth and development or functioning. Instead, there are competing theories put forth by advocates of different approaches to human behavior, which influenced by: culture, society, morals, ethics, and genetics. [ Show Less ]

 

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Emotional development concepts and applications
Well-Rounded Emotional Development as the Key Towards Cultivating a Healthy Self- Esteem
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Older Americans Experience Spousal Bereavement
¶ … older Americans experience spousal bereavement annually. Bereavement is the state of having experienced a loss, and grief is the generally passive and involuntary reaction to the state of bereavement, and although…
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Barthes' theory of myth as speech: analyzing Henry V and transformations of meaning
This paper discusses Shakespeare's Henry V as a tale of national self-mythologization. The victory of the English comes to symbolize the triumph of English democratic values over the values of the elitist French, even though the two nations are technically fighting over a plot of land, not moral values. Henry comes to symbolize the 'common touch' of English kingship.
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Psychology Theories in Psychology, Personality Can Be
In this paper, I have compared and contrasted the three personality theories i.e. Freud's Psychoanalytic theory, Existential Theory and Person-Centered Theory. I have included/reflected on the pathology, health or wellness, treatment and the weight or significance placed on early life by these theories. In this paper, I have compared and contrasted the three personality theories i.e. Freud's Psychoanalytic theory, Existential Theory and Person-Centered Theory. I have included/reflected on the pathology, health or wellness, treatment and the weight or significance placed on early life by these theories.
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Depression Psychology and Treatment for Depression There
When a person is battling depression there are all different types of treatments that he or she can consider. Some are more effective than others, of course, and there are some kinds of treatments that will work for one person but that will not work for another. To that end, each person who is depressed should seek out the help that will be right for him or her, instead of simply accepting what he or she is offered.
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Humans Have Been Experimenting With and Fascinated
¶ … humans have been experimenting with and fascinated by the various states of consciousness. It is common knowledge that man regularly moves through these different states of being.
Thesis Masters
The Kite Runner
Bennett, Tony. Formalism and Marxism. Routledge, 2003.
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Defend One of the 3 Determinism Libertarianism or Compatibilism
Philosophical views on free will are discussed, with specific reference to how the idea of God may be involved. Views are divided into determinism, libertarianism, and compatibilism, with the last of these being endorsed. Determinists examine free will—the human capacity to choose a course of action from different ethically-weighted possibilities—and decide that every cause has a prior cause, and thus free will is a myth. Libertarians examine free will, and decide that determinism is a myth. Meanwhile compatibilists examine determinism and libertarianism and find some middle route whereby the two possibilities can be made consistent with each other. The paper concludes that the free will debate itself could be effortlessly recast as a debate about theology, in which few of the participants seem aware of the fact that they are engaged in theological debate.
Paper Undergraduate
Revolutions in Romantic Literature
This is a series of five article reviews covering five different articles. Each deals with some aspect of literature during the Romantic period from a different lens of literary theory. One deals with psychological theory and Wordsworth, another with postcolonial theory and India and how it was influenced by England. Each is analysed for strenght.
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The attached article by ryansd2011
¶ … Tracy Bowen set out in 2003 to ask six artists how they were "exchanging and integrating manual and digital procedures as a way of producing images" (Bowen, 2003, p. 220) and their comfort levels with the evolving,…