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From Galen's four temperaments to Wundt's first psychology lab — the philosophical foundations that gave birth to the science of mind.
Galen
Descartes
Kierkegaard
Francis Galton
Wilhelm Wundt
William James
Pavlov's dogs, Skinner's boxes, Watson's rats — the radical idea that all behavior is learned through conditioning, and the mind is a black box.
Ivan Pavlov
John B. Watson
B.F. Skinner
Edward Thorndike
Konrad Lorenz
Joseph Wolpe
Freud, Jung, Adler, Maslow, Rogers — the unconscious mind, archetypes, the hierarchy of needs, and the birth of the talking cure.
Sigmund Freud
Carl Jung
Alfred Adler
Abraham Maslow
Carl Rogers
Viktor Frankl
Fritz Perls
The mind as a computer — memory, perception, attention, language, and decision-making. Piaget, Beck, Festinger, and the cognitive revolution.
Jean Piaget
Aaron Beck
Leon Festinger
George Miller
Jerome Bruner
Donald Broadbent
Milgram's obedience experiments, Zimbardo's prison study, Asch's conformity — how other people shape our thoughts, feelings, and actions.
Stanley Milgram
Philip Zimbardo
Solomon Asch
Kurt Lewin
Leon Festinger
Gordon Allport
From infant to adult — Bowlby's attachment theory, Erikson's life stages, Kohlberg's moral development, and the psychology of individual differences.
John Bowlby
Erik Erikson
Lawrence Kohlberg
Lev Vygotsky
Hans Eysenck
Howard Gardner
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