AP - Comparison of approaches Flashcards

1
Q

In what 3 ways can we compare the approaches in psychology?

A
  • Determinism: the causes of behaviour.
  • Nature and nurture: the role of innate and experimental factors.
  • Psychology as a science.
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2
Q

What is determinism?

A

Refers to the belief that behaviour is determined by forces other than the individual’s will to do something.

Behaviour is determined by external or internal factors acting upon the individual.

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3
Q

Compare the approaches: Determinism: the causes of behaviour.

A

Behaviour is determined by:

Behaviourist - External forces in the environment (e.g. rewards and punishment) shape our behaviour.

SLT - Observations of others.

Cognitive - Our own thought processes so we have some degree of control over our behaviour.

Biological - Physiological (e.g. hormonal/neurochemical) factors and/or inherited (genetic) factors outside of our control.

Psychodynamic - Unconscious factors beyond our conscious control.

Humanistic - Our own free will under our conscious control.

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4
Q

Compare the approaches: Nature and nurture: the role of innate and experimental factors.

A

The origin of behaviour is:

Behaviourist - Nurture.

SLT - Primarily nurture.

Cognitive - Both nature and nurture.

Biological - Primarily nature.

Psychodynamic - Both nature and nurture.

Humanistic - Both nature and nurture.

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5
Q

Compare the approaches: Psychology as a science.

A

Its commitment to the scientific method is:

Behaviourist - Positive as it is highly objective and experimentally based.

SLT - Positive as its research investigations are reliable and allow inferences about cause and effect to be drawn but research can lack validity.

Cognitive - Positive to a degree as most propositions can be easily tested.

Biological - Positive as it lends itself to experimental study.

Psychodynamic - Mixed as some aspects are open to scientific investigation but there tends to be much greater reliance on case studies and subjective interpretation.

Humanistic - Largely negative as it says that scientific research methods are not appropriate for studying the complexities of human consciousness and experience.

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6
Q

What is nature?

A

Behaviour is seen to be a product of innate (biological or genetic) factors.

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7
Q

What is nurture?

A

Behaviour is a product of environmental influences.

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8
Q

What is science?

A

A systematic approach to creating knowledge. The method used to gain scientific knowledge is referred to as the scientific method.

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