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The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

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Page 1: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

The Continental Philosophers

• Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity• Empiricism vs. Rationalism• Nurture vs. Nature

Page 2: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

German Rationalism

• A reaction against empiricism and associationism

• The mind is active

Page 3: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Immanuel Kant (b. 1724)

• An eccentric guy• Hume woke him up

from a “dogmatic slumber”

• Critique of Pure Reason (1781)

• Views on science

Page 4: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Kant’s View

• All knowledge does not rise out of experience, because experience is finite

• Sensations are ordered by the mind's structure (architecture) into perceptions and knowledge

• Mind is an active entity governed by innate structures

Page 5: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Upshot on Kant

• Mind is an active entity• Mind has innate structures• Mind consists of categories of thought• Kant did not think psychology would ever be a

true science

Page 6: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

The Neo-Kantians

Page 7: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Hegel (b. 1770)

• Expanded Kant’s views• Argued that categories

of thought exist independently of any one individual’s thought

Page 8: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

The Hegelian Dialectic

• Dialectical approach to change, movement, and progress

• Thesis - antithesis - synthesis - New Thesis..................

• Textbook says that this is like id-superego-ego…. Bullpoop.

Page 9: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Herbart (b. 1776)

• ”Founder of Educational Psychology“

• “Preview, Present, Review”

Page 10: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Contributions to Psychology

• Lehrbuch zur Psychologie (1816)• Psychology is a separate science from philosophy or

physiology• ”Threshold of Consciousness"• Ideas may strive to enter consciousness, but may be

prevented through repression

Page 11: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Schopenhauer (b. 1788)

Page 12: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature
Page 13: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

• "The World as Will and Representation"• "The World is my Idea“

Page 14: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Schopenhauer on Will

• The driving impulse of all nature is will, our essence is will

• Freud’s id similar to his concept of will• Spoke of repression

Page 15: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

The Philosopher of Pessimism

• “God is Dead”• “There can be no true happiness, because

happiness is only a brief respite from pain. Pain results from unfilled desires, which most of them are.”

• But, can escape this through celibacy, avoiding gluttony and drink, and appreciating art

Page 16: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Schopenhauer’s Dog

Page 17: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Other Strains of Thought at this Time

Page 18: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Positivism

• Movement to replace religion and philosophy with science

• No ultimate goal or purpose to nature

• Scientific approach to social order and social development

Page 19: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Comte (b. 1798)

• "Course on Positive Philosophy“

• Wished to form a "religion of humanity“

Page 20: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Comte and Science

• Explanations of life shift from theological to metaphysical to scientific as human intellectual progress occurs

• Different fields progress at different rates• 6 basic sciences: mathematics, astronomy,

physics, chemistry, physiology (biology), social physics (sociology)

• Law of Stages: Theological, Metaphysical, Positivistic

Page 21: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Comte and Psychology

• Psychology should be subsumed under physiology

• A science of mind wasn't possible• Founder of sociology, term coined in 1830

Page 22: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Mach (b. 1838)

• Physicist and "modern positivist" philosopher

• A basic set of rules must be established in order to assure the integrity of science

Page 23: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Contributions to Science/Psychology

• Sensations are the basic data of psychological science ("Analysis of Sensations,” 1886)

• Visual perception (Mach bands)• Rejected Newton's concepts of absolute space and

time• Matter traveling through air moving faster than speed

of sound altered the quality of the space through which it moved

Page 24: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature
Page 25: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Romanticism

• Reaction against empiricism and rationalism

• Emphasized the whole person, especially feelings and emotions

Page 26: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Rosseau (b. 1712)

• Man is born naturally good but through society becomes corrupt

• Morality corrupted by the shift from religion towards science

• The Social Contract• "Liberty, Equality,

Fraternity"

Page 27: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

The Myth of Marie Antoinette

• “At length I recollected the thoughtless saying of a great princess, who, on being informed that the country people had no bread, replied, Let them eat cake!”

Page 28: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Goethe (b. 1749)

• Writer, scientist, musician, philosopher

• FAUST!• Contributed to

psychology, anatomy, zoology, optics, mineralogy, meteorology

Page 29: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Contributions to Psychology

• Believed in exact observation of phenomena• Pioneer in implosive therapy? • Research on color vision

Page 30: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Existentialism

• A happy, positive outlook on life… NOT!

• Preoccupation with the consequences of using one’s free will in an isolated and hostile universe where depression, despair, and death abounds…

Page 31: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Soren Kierkegaard (b. 1813)

• Founder of Existentialism

• “Fear and Trembling”• “The Concept of Dread”• “Sickness unto Death”

Page 32: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Kierkegaard’s Philosophy

• The most important human activity is decision-making

• It is through the choices we make that we create ourselves and become ourselves

• Aesthetic vs. Ethical vs. Religious planes

Page 33: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Friedrich Nietzsche (b. 1844)

• “The Birth of Tragedy”• “Human All Too

Human”• “Beyond Good and

Evil”• “Thus Spoke

Zarathustra”

Page 34: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Famous Quotes

• “God is Dead”• “Art raises its head when religions relax their

hold”• “A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum

shows that faith does not prove anything.”• “And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the

abyss gazes also into you.”• “What does not kill him, makes him stronger.”

Page 35: The Continental Philosophers Mental Passivity vs. Mental Activity Empiricism vs. Rationalism Nurture vs. Nature

Nietzsche’s Philosophy

• Life is a largely meaningless business of suffering and striving

• Morals, ethics, and values are human creations

• “Will to Power”• “The Superman”• Dionysus/Apollo