Friday, November 15, 2019
The Behaviorist and Cognitive Approaches to Psychology Essay -- Papers
The Behaviorist and Cognitive Approaches to Psychology       In this essay I am going to explore two of the major approaches to     Psychology, Cognitive theories and Behaviorist theories. I will     discuss in some detail the two approaches, state how they compare and     illustrate the similarities and the differences between them.       John Watson, one of the founders of Behaviorism, based his theories     on the principles of learning outlined by Pavlov who suggested the     theory known as Classical Conditioning; he trained dogs to salivate     whenever he rang a bell. Dogs have a natural reflex response to     salivate when they see food, Pavlov rang a bell when the dogs were     given food and after several repetitions of this action, the dogs     began to salivate whenever they heard the bell, even when there was     not any food there. This approach rejected the idea of the conscious     mind. Albert Ellis & Aaron T Beck developed the present form of the     Cognitive approach to psychology in the 1950ââ¬â¢s. This development     emerged from a growing dissatisfaction with the narrowness of the     behaviorist approach as it neglects complex human activities such as     planning and communication.       Behaviorists emphasize the relationship between the environment     surrounding a person and how it affects a personââ¬â¢s behavior. This     approach has a tendency to ignore mental processes. Behaviorists     believe that studying the brain is not ultimately the best or most     effective way to understand behavior. A person might act oddly in one     particular environment, but normal in others. Whilst cognitive     psychologists agree with the behaviorist theory that the environment     surrounding a person does have some inf...              ...hey may be thinking or feeling, if focuses on what     you can see not the emotions. It is difficult to measure the thinking     or feeling of independence and the behaviour of others, as well as the     expectations of others in any particular given situation, for example     John Watson believed that given the right environment anybody could be     made into anything.           Sources of Information     ======================       Psychology ââ¬â A New Introduction by Richard Gross, Rob McIlveen, Hugh     Coolicun, Alan Clamp and Julia Russell  (Twelfth Edition)       Hilgards Introduction to Psychology by Rita L Atkinson, Richard C     Atkison, Edward G Smith, Daryl J Bern and Susan Nolen-Hoeksema      (Second Edition)       Basic Psychology by Henry Gleitman  (First Edition)       www.sntp.net/behaviourism.thml       http://scs.une.edu.au/Materials/573/573_4.html                        
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