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Intro to Psychology - Crash Course Psychology #1

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    That dream about the dinosaur in the leotard!
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    Those times that you said that thing, that you know you shouldn't have said, or even that thing that you didn't even know you were gonna say!
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    The little cogs of your consciousness cranking away making your life possible, making society function.
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    All of those things you're so glad you can do and all of the ones you wish you could stop doing.
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    Excluding other human minds,
    your mind is the most complicated piece
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    of the universe that humans
    currently know about.
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    The rules that govern it are mysterious and elusive.
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    Maybe our brains just aren't complex enough to understand themselves, but that's not gonna stop us from trying.
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    The word 'psychology' comes from the latin for 'the study of the soul'.
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    And while it's formal definition has evolved over the last several decades, today we can safely call it the science of behavior and mental processes.
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    The term 'psychology' wasn't coined until around the turn of the sixteenth century,
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    and the practice that we would actually call science today wasn't established until the mid eighteenth hundreds.
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    But of course, humans have always been curious about themselves and what's going on up here.
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    Aristotle pondered the seed of human consciousness and decided that it was in the heart, not the head.
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    Being as we have seen quite a lot here on Crashcourse, absolutely and completely wrong.
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    Two thousand years ago, Chinese rulers conducted the world's first psychological exams, requiring public officials to take personality and intelligence tests,
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    and in the late 800's, persian doctor Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, also known as Rhazes,
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    was one of the first to describe mental illness, and even treated patients in what was essentially a very early psych ward in his Baghdad hospital.
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    From the efforts of those early thinkers up until today the field of psychology has been all about tackling some of the big questions.
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    How can humans do horrible things like commit genocide and torture other humans and how come we know those things are horrible?
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    Do we have free will or are we simply driven by our environment, biology and non-conscious influences.
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    What is mental illness and what can we do about it? And what is consciousness or the notion of self?
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    If I lose my awareness of myself, am I still human? I don't know! But over the next six months, these are the questions that we are gonna be exploring together.
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    How our brains work, how they can break, how they can be healed, why we behave the way we do
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    even when we don't want to, and what it means to be thinking, and feeling and alive.
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    Episode 1
    INTRO TO PSYCHOLOGY
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    When hearing the word psychology; most people probably think of a therapist listening to a patient unpacking the details of his day or reclining on a couch.
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    Every time that therapist is wearing glasses, chewing on a cigar, stroking his whisker chin... Admit it!!
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    If you're thinking about psychology, you're probably picturing Freud.
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    Sigmund Freud was one of the most tremendously influential and controversial thinkers of his time, maybe of all time.
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    His theories helped build our views on childhood, personality, dreams and sexuality, and his work fueled a legacy of both support and opposition.
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    His life was long and spanned an important swath of history from the American Civil War to World War II.
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    But like most great scientists, Freud developed his revolutionary ideas by building on the work of others.
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    And of course, innovation in the field didn't stop with him!
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    In truth, psychology is one of the most widely diverse sciences in terms of the questions it proposes,
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    the methods it applies, and the different schools of thought and disciplines it contains.
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    Perhaps more than any other science, psychology is just a big old integrated melting pot...
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    For instance, right around Freud's time there were a lot of different schools of thought about how the study of the human mind should be tackled.
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    Mainly, there were the ideas of structuralism, functionalism and psychoanalysis.
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    Scientific psychology got its start in 1879 in Germany, when physician Wilhelm Wundt set up the first psychology laboratory at the University of Leipzig,
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    just a few years after publishing his Principles of Physiological Psychology, considered the first true psychology textbook.
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    Wundt and his student Edward Bradbord Titchener took cues from chemists and physicists,
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    and argued that if those people could break down all matter into simple elements or structures, why they couldn't do the same for the brain?
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    They tried to understand the structures of consciousness by getting patients to look inward,
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    asking them how they felt when they watched the sunset, or smelled the coffee or licked a kitten or whatever.
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    Titchener named this aproach structuralism, but despite its rigid sounding name, it really relied so much on introspection that it became too subjective.
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    I mean, you may sense and feel something different that I do even if we lick the same kitten.
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    Psychologists of course can't actually observe the patient's inner thoughts or feelings, so ultimately the structuralist school of thought was fairly short lived.
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    By contrast, American physician and philosopher William James proposed a different
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    set of questions focusing on why we think and feel and smell and... lick. Whatever.
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    Basically, he focused on the function of behavior.
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    This approach, functionalism was inspired by Charles Darwin's ideas that adapted behaviours are conserved throughout the evolutionary process.
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    James published his seminal book "The Principles of Psychology" in 1890,
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    defining psychology as the science of mental life; just as Freud was starting to flex his big brain.
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    Sigmund Freud began his medical career at a Viennese hospital but in 1886 he started his own practice specializing in nervous disorders.
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    During this time, Freud witnessed his colleague Josef Breuer treat a patient called "Ana O."; with a new talking cure.
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    Basically, he just let her talk about her symptoms. The more she talked and pulled up traumatic memories, the more her symptoms were reduced.
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    It was a breakthrough and it changed Freud forever. From then on, Freud encouraged his patients to talk freely
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    about whatever came to mind, to free associate. This technique provided the basis for his career, and an entire branch of psychology.
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    In 1900 he published his book "The Interpretation of Dreams", where he introduced his theory of psychoanalysis.
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    Now, you probably think of psychoanalysis as a treatment, the whole patient on the couch scenario, and that's definitely part of it.
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    But Freud's concept was actually a lot more complex than that, and it was revolutionary.
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    The radical kernel of psychoanalysis was the theory that our personalities are shaped by unconscious motives.
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    Basically Freud suggested that we are all profoundly affected by mental processes that we are not even aware of.
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    Now that sounds almost obvious to us now, but part of the genius of Freud's theory was that in 1900 it wasn't obvious at all.
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    The idea that our minds could be driven by something that our minds themselves didn't know about was hard to grasp.
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    As hard as, like... maybe... organisms evolving by natural selection! It was abstract, invisible, and there was something about it that seemed...
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    Irrational! But the other important part of Freud's theory was that the subconscious, literally the thing below consciousness, was still discoverable.
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    Even though you weren't aware of it, you could come to understand it through a therapeutic technique that used dreams,
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    projections and free associations to rule out repressed feelings and gain self-insight.
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    So what Freud was really saying was that mental disorders could be healed through talk therapy and self discovery, and this was really a big break-through,
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    because prior to this people with mental illnesses would be confined to sanatoriums and at best given menial labor to do,
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    and at worst shackled to a bed frame. After The "Interpretation of Dreams" Freud went on to publish 20 more books and countless papers
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    with an iconic cigar in hand all the while. He believed smoking helped him think, but it also helped him get jaw cancer.
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    During the last 16 years of his life he underwent at least 30 painfull operations, while continuing to smoke.
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    By the late 1930's the Nazis had taken over Austria and Freud and his Jewish family narrowly escaped to England.
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    By september 1939 the pain in his cancerous jaw was too great and a doctor friend assisted him in suicide through morphine injection.
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    He was 83. Whether you love him or hate him, and make no mistake, plenty of people vehemently disagreed with him,
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    There is no question that Freud's impact on psychology was monumental.
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    While competing theories in the young field of psychology either fell away or evolved into something else,
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    psychoanalysis remains an important concept and practice today.
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    The next big shakeup rolled in during the first half of the 20th century when behaviorism gained a higher profile.
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    Heavy hitters like Ivan Pavlov, John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner were key players here.
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    They focused on the study of observable behaviour.
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    You may remember Skinner as the dude who put rats and pigeons and babies in boxes and conditioned them to perform certain behaviors.
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    Right around when Freud escaped to England Skinner published his "Behavior of Organisms",
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    ushering in the era of behaviourism, which remained all the rage well into the 1960's.
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    The other major force at the time was of course Freud's psychoanalysis, and it's many descendants collectively known as the psychodynamic theories.
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    These focused on the importance of early experiences in shaping the unconsciousness
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    and how that process affects our thoughts, feelings, behaviours and personalities.
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    By the mid 20th century other major forces in psychology were also brewing schools we'll explore later in this course including humanists psychology,
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    which focuses on nurturing personal growth, cognitive science and neuroscience,
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    all of which contributed their own unique takes on the study of mind.
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    Today's formal definition of psychology "the study of behaviour and mental processes"; is a nice amalgamation
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    that pulls from all these different schools of thought. It recognises the need for observing and recording
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    behaviour whether that's screaming, crying or playing air saxophone to an imaginery audience,
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    but it also gives credit to our mental processes, what we think and feel and believe while we are tearing it up on our invisible instruments,
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    because again the point that I really want you to take home is that psychology is an integrated science.
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    Yes, folks still get grumpy and disagree plenty, but the essence of the discipline has everything to do with creating different ways of asking interesting questions
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    and attempting to answer them through all kinds of data gathering methods.
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    The human mind is complicated, there is no single way to effectively crack it open.
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    It must be pried at from all different sides. Harvard astronomer Owan Kindgrich has gazed at the distant horizons of space,
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    and even he has acknowledged that the human brain is by far the most complex physical object known to us in the entire cosmos.
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    And we all get to have one! Of our very own!
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    Knocking around right up in here. We here at Crashcourse are really excited to spend the next several months delving into the world of psychology,
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    how it applies to our lives, our minds, and our hearts, and how it deepens our understanding of each other, our world and ourselves.
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    Thanks for watching this fist lesson on Crashcourse psychology and I'd like to especially thank all of our subbable subscribers,
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    without whom we would literally not be able to do this.
Title:
Intro to Psychology - Crash Course Psychology #1
Description:

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What does Psychology mean? Where does it come from? Hank gives you a 10 minute intro to one of the more tricky sciences and talks about some of the big names in the development of the field. Welcome to Crash Course Psychology!!!

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
10:54

English subtitles

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