History of Psychology

  • 1600 BCE

    Edwin Smith Papyrus

    Edwin Smith Papyrus
    First written description of the brain and it's control over the body.
  • Period: 753 BCE to 730 BCE

    Ancient Rome

    Believed in optimal happiness ("self-help") and to live the best life. Happiness was achieved through quiet acceptance and belief in fate.
  • Period: 690 BCE to 510 BCE

    Parmenides

    Note that dates of life are not specific. Believed that: change is illusion; don't trust the senses; if it can be thought of, it exists; and thinking is introspection
  • Period: 620 BCE to 546 BCE

    Thales

    Believed in natural principles; water makes up everything; began critical tradition of questioning everything
  • Period: 570 BCE to 495 BCE

    Pythagorus

    Believed in: Mathematical thinking and the relationship between phenomena; rationalism and the belief that natural phenomena followed patterns and laws (ratio)
  • Period: 490 BCE to 420 BCE

    The Sophists/Protagoras

    Subjective nature of reality; cognition (all experiences of reality are different)
  • Period: 469 BCE to 399 BCE

    Socrates

    Believed in: questioning everything; "know thyself" (psychodynamic psychology)
  • Period: 460 BCE to 370 BCE

    Democritus

    Believed: everything made of small items that cannot be divided (atoms); reductionism, materialism, and determinism; and deductionism.
  • Period: 450 BCE to 380 BCE

    Hippocrates

    Recognized importance of physical well-being and health. Proposed relationship of the state of the body on behavior. Created the theory of four humors: blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile.
  • Period: 427 BCE to 347 BCE

    Plato

    Student of Socrates. Recorded all of Socrates ideas. Believed in subjectivity of reality and the personality of "The Golden Chariot"
  • Period: 384 BCE to 322 BCE

    Aristotle

    Student of Plato. First scientist in Greece. Believed in expericism, memory (law of contiguity, law of contrast, similarity, and frequency); behaviorism (human nature); emotions (changing perceptions); and dreams (pure memories without control of the logical mind).
  • Period: Jan 28, 1225 to Mar 7, 1274

    St. Thomas Aquinas

    Believed in scientific investigation of the natural world and "knowing God".
  • Period: Apr 25, 1300 to

    Reannaisance Era

    Return of Questioning and Technological Advances and Marked Cultural Change
  • Period: to

    Rene Descartes

    Believed: the senses were flawed and to doubt everything until you reached information beyond doubt. He even doubted himself until he realized he did exist because he was a thinking thing.
  • Period: to

    Thomas Willis

    Recognized difference between white vs. gray matter in the brain and spinal cord. Established anatomy of blood vessels to the brain. Also recognized that injuries that cut off the blood flow to the brain caused seizures.
  • Period: to

    John Locke

    Believed contents of mind built from sensory experience and everyone begins in a blank state.
  • Rene Descartes Quote

    Rene Descartes Quote
    "I think, therefore I am."
  • Thomas Willis Published First Brain Anatomy Atlas

    Thomas Willis Published First Brain Anatomy Atlas
    First visual anatomy of the brain
  • Period: to

    Immanuel Kant

    Created the foundation for the establishment of experimental psychology. Viewed differences in our experiences as a "creative mind agent". Believed differences could be studied and the mind uses more raw data that it gets from senses to create perceptions.
  • Period: to

    Johann Joseph Gassner

    Treated ailments with exorcisms. Ordered demons to create symptoms in various body parts and established control over the demons.
  • Period: to

    Franz Mesmer

    Believed in animal gravitational-ism. Also believed in magnetism. Made the baquet. Because of his studies, social contagion and facilitation was discovered.
  • Period: to

    William Paley

    Believed all species were so complex, they must've been created by God.
  • Period: to

    Jean-Baptiste Lamarck

    Proposed that species evolve on the use or disuse of specific organs.
  • Period: to

    Marquis de Puysegur

    Discovered artificial somnambulism (hypnotism) and post hypnotic suggestibility.
  • Period: to

    Abbe Faria

    investigated why mesmerism didn't work on every patient. Discovered lucid sleep.
  • Period: to

    Franz Josef Gall

    Found that hemispheres were connected by white matter bundles and that there was crossovers of nerve fibers from right to left in the spinal cord. Higher abilities were the result of larger and more developed brains. Larger substructures in the brain correlated to better, specific abilities. "Physiognomy" and "Phrenology"
  • Period: to

    Charles Bell

    Law of specific nerve energies were sensory neurons that conveyed information that was relevant to that sensory system. The cells in the eye could only transmit visual information to the mind.
  • Period: to

    Jean Pierre Flourens

    Opposed Gall's phrenology and conducted ablation studies on animals, which suggested that the brain's cortex function was a unified whole.
  • Period: to

    James Braid

    Tested mesmerism and made it scientific. Coined the term hypnotism.
  • Period: to

    John Stevens Henslow

    Charles Darwin's professor. Recommended Darwin to serve as the head naturalist on the Beagle voyage.
  • Period: to

    Jean Baptiste Bouillaud

    Language localized to region in left frontal lobe.
  • Period: to

    Charles Lyell

    Geologist that promoted the idea of uniformitarianism in explaining how the Earth was developed.
  • Period: to

    Gustav Fechner

    Created quantified relationships between stimulus like intensity and subjective experience.
  • Period: to

    Johannes Peter Muller

    First experiments on sensation and perception. Studies discovered lawful relationships between newly measurable energy and subjective reactions of the mind and body. This was the first step to psychology being genuine science.
  • Period: to

    James Esdaile

    Did over three hundred and more surgeries on mesmerized patients.
  • Period: to

    Charles Darwin

    Brought idea of natural selection and believed in monogenesis.
  • Period: to

    Emil du Bois-Reymond

    Discovered electrochemical pattern of neuron communication. Body transforms energy from the environment into a "message" that causes changes to the body/brain. Viewed the mind as something mechanical. Developed the theory of color.
  • Period: to

    Hermann von Helmholtz

    First experiments on sensation and perception. Studies discovered lawful relationships between newly measurable energy and subjective reactions of the mind and body. This was the first step to psychology being genuine science.
  • Period: to

    Ambroise-Auguste Liebeault

    First hypnotherapist. Studied role of individual differences in response to hypnotism.
  • Period: to

    Paul Broca

    Found evidence that localization of one function affected one are in the brain.
  • Period: to

    Jean-Martin Charcot

    Neurologist and Directior of Salpatriere Hospital in Paris. Discovered hysteria and hypnotizable suggestibility.
  • Period: to

    Wilhelm Wundt

    Founder of modern psychology. Labeled the science of psychology and distinguished it from natural sciences and physiology.
  • Period: to

    David Ferrier

    Recognized the primary somatosensory cortex, visual cortex, auditory cortex process, and association cortex.
  • Period: to

    Carl Wernicke

    Had patients with fluent speech, but no comprehension. He named this Wernicke's area. He recognized complex functions were the result of an interaction of multiple brain functions, known as the "association cortex". These complex functions didn't exist in isolation from other simple functions.
  • Period: to

    Ivan Pavlov

    Began the behaviorist movement. Creator of classical conditioning and higher order conditioning.
  • Period: to

    Hermann Ebbinghaus

    Discovered a higher mental process. Investigated learning and memory. Changed the way association is studied.
  • Paul Broca met "Ton"

    Paul Broca met "Ton"
    Man had aphasia or "lack of words"
  • The Nancy School

    The Nancy School
    Devoted to training of the scientific investigation into hypnotism.
  • Period: to

    Edward B. Titchener

    Studied structuralism and discovered the key the to conscious mind is understanding the individual structures. Also had progressive views on female scientists.
  • Gustav Fritsch and Eduard Hitzig

    Gustav Fritsch and Eduard Hitzig
    Created electrical stimulation studies on the brain. Discovered the primary motor cortex caused the body to move.
  • Period: to

    Stepherd Ivory Franz

    Combined memory studies with ablation studies. Did selective ablation on cortex and figured any ablation of damage on the frontal cortex damaged memory but ablations elsewhere didn't. With more damage, there was more memory impairment. After damage, people can relearn.
  • Period: to

    John Watson

    Studied behavior and defined it as an objective science. Rejected introspection. Discovered that most human reactions result from conditioning of neutral stimuli paired with three innate, unconditional reactions like fear, rage, and love.
  • Period: to

    Karl Spencer Lashley

    Combined memory studies with ablation studies. Did selective ablation on cortex and figured any ablation of damage on the frontal cortex damaged memory but ablations elsewhere didn't. With more damage, there was more memory impairment. After damage, people can relearn.
  • Period: to

    Wilder Penfield

    Found there was always a warning before seizures. Found that stimulation of areas next to primary areas (somatosensory, visual, and auditory) elicited more complex experiences and response. Also discovered the hippocampus.
  • Period: to

    Mary Cover Jones

    Conducted first study using counter conditioning as a procedure for removing fear.
  • Period: to

    B. F. Skinner

    Invented the operant chamber and studied operant conditioning.
  • Psychology Becoming More Dominant in America

  • Period: to

    Eleanor J. Gibson

    Devised the "visual cliff" studies, which resulted in the idea that depth perception occurs innately or extremely early in development without prior learning.
  • Gestalt Psychology

    Focuses on ways the mind organizes experiences and perceptions into organized wholes that are more than the sums of their separate parts.
  • Period: to

    Jerome S. Bruner

    Studied "nonobjective influences on behavior", perception, and how it was influenced by mental processes.
  • Period: to

    Brenda Milner

    Student of Penfield. Discovered temporal lobe damage. Discovered different types of memory like episodic, procedural, and semantic. Also discovered that without the hippocampus, people cannot have procedural memory.
  • Period: to

    George Miller

    Was interested in speech processing and perception.
  • Period: to

    Noam Chomsky

    Developed more "mentalistic" theory of language learning. Believed in linguistics and that language learning is fast and natural. Emphasized the importance of mental processes in the ability to learn language.
  • Period: to

    Ulric Neisser

    Conducted research on information processing, cognition, intelligence, and memory.