Elfa
Señora Member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2011
- Messages
- 267
- MBTI Type
- INFP
- Enneagram
- 4w5
Behaviorism is an assumption that mind is irrelevant and people are just acting according to external world, thus they think that looking at how people behave to certain stimuli, they can find out everything from him.
I looked it up and you were right, some branches of behaviorism still exist and behaviorism was just largely replaced by cognitive psychology(what you called mentalism? studies how mental processes affect behavior) and cognitive neuropsychology(tries to find neural correlate to mental processes). i dont really get why some people cant let go of behaviorism already..
Even tho MBTI is based on jungs theories of personality and unconscious is one of the key aspects to jungs personality theory, MBTI leaves unconscious totally out of it(one of the reasons why it sucks compared to jungs theory). in MBTI you speak of undeveloped functions and means that you simply dont use them or cant use them well, they drain you or what ever. jung on the other hand talks about these "undeveloped" functions as unconscious functions that you still use as much as developed functions, but you use them unconsciously(dont have conscious control over) and that they link themselves to other functions and have guiding effect to consciousness.
Freud didnt come up with the idea of unconscious, that idea has been around for ages(if i remember right, even aristoteles wrote something about it). freud simply made claims about what this unconscious is. and if you are trying to nitpick on freudian definition of those, at least do the nitpicking properly;
conscious: everything we are aware at a given moment
preconscious: thoughts, feelings, memories, that can be easily brought to conscious level
unconscious: thoughts, feelings, memories and wishes that are difficult to bring awareness.
Its not that unconscious determines us, its just that unconscious is us.
Personally i prefer jungian approach to whole psyche(conscious, personal unconscious, collective unconscious and body). but jung approach is largely the same as freuds, but jung doesent talk about everything that freud did and some of those things are pretty important. but thats not because jung disapproved them, its just because he didnt have anything to add.
Did wikipedia actually say "random association"? Anyways the wiki quote sucks and only lists words, not concepts or meanings behind the words.
Actually Watson's methodological behaviourism (the first of all behaviourisms) had the assumption that mind is irrelevant and people are acting according to external world; but Skinner's radical behaviourism assumes that there isn't a mind. I was talking about radical behaviourism and I should have said it before... Watson's behaviourism has really been replaced by other theories, but the radical behaviourism is quite popular right now and it has been the most effective approach to the treatment of autist children and some other stuff.
I had no idea about the relations between unconscious and MBTI, I just knew Jung believed in unconscious mind and MBTI was based in his theories. XD But it's good to know that.
You are right about Freud, he didn't made the "unconscious mind" term. I made a mistake in my previous post...
I'm was not trying to nitpick :/, I just thought you were trying to clarify some concepts and I corrected you, but thank you for saying almost what I said, but with other words.
Hum... We are actually made of conscious and unconscious, we are them both together... And the unconscious is what determines our behaviours and wishes (in Freud's theory).
Yes, Wikipedia said "random association". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconscious_mind . I don't know what is the right english expression for that term; in portuguese we call it "associação livre", which the translation means "free association". I guess "random association" could mean that... But I might be wrong...
For the OP, I admit I didn't get what Ginkgo wanted to say in the end of the post...:/ (sorry my bad english ><) But I can say the divide between conscious and unconscious is made in the relation with other people (according to Freud). So maybe looking outside could be useful too in understanding ourselves? (I'm really not sure of this, since I'm not even sure if I got the OP... :/)