History of Spanish Psychology, 1800–2000

Author(s):  
Javier Bandrés

In the history of Spanish psychology in the 19th century, three stages can be distinguished. An eclectic first stage was defined by the coexistence of currents such as spiritualism, sensism, ideology, and common-sense realism. Jaime Balmes was the most prominent and original author, integrating empiricism and associationism in the Spanish tradition of common-sense philosophy. The second stage was characterized by the influence of Krausism, a version of German rationalist pantheism imported by Julián Sanz del Río, that reached great acceptance during the 1860s and 1870s among intellectuals opposed to traditional Catholicism. The third stage began in the late 1870s: the reception, adaptation, development, and debate of the “new psychology” flowing from Germany, Great Britain, and France. A group of neo-Kantian intellectuals led by Cuban José del Perojo, a disciple of Kuno Fischer, introduced and popularized experimental psychology and comparative psychology in Spain. His project was vigorously seconded in Cuba by Enrique José Varona, author of the first Spanish manual of experimental psychology. In this path, the Marxist psychiatrist and intellectual Jaime Vera promoted in Madrid a materialistic view of psychology, and his colleague and friend Luis Simarro won the first university chair of Experimental Psychology, fostering a school of psychologists oriented toward experimental science. In turn, the publication in 1879 of the papal encyclical Aeterni Patris stimulated the development of a Spanish neoscholastic scientific psychology, developed under the influence of Cardinal Mercier of the Catholic University of Louvain. Authors such as Zeferino González, Marcelino Arnáiz, and Alberto Gómez Izquierdo broke with the anti-modern tradition of the Spanish Church and developed an experimental psychology within the Aristotelian-Thomistic framework. In the first three decades of the 20th century, applied psychology expanded radically, linked to a period of strong socioeconomic growth. Abnormal and educational psychology developed vigorously, and Spanish psychotechnics, led by José Germain in Madrid and Emilio Mira in Barcelona, was at the forefront of European science. In 1936 the Spanish Civil War imposed a bloody parenthesis to the economic and scientific development of the country. In the postwar period, the psychiatrist Antonio Vallejo-Nágera and his group tried to manipulate psychological research to legitimize some of general Franco's policies. Simultaneously, two neoscholastic scholars, Manuel Barbado and Juan Zaragüeta, supervised the recovery and scientific development of Spanish psychology through institutions such as the Department of Experimental Psychology of the Higher Council for Scientific Research, the National Institute of Psychotechnics, and the School of Applied Psychology and Psychotechnics of the University of Madrid. José Germain was chosen to direct and guide these projects, and a new generation of academic psychologists was formed: Mariano Yela, José Luis Pinillos, and Miguel Siguán, among others. The economic expansion of the 1960s and 1970s and the end of Franco’s dictatorship produced a huge development of academic and professional psychology, with Spanish psychology becoming positively integrated into Western science. On the other side of the Atlantic, the psychology of liberation developed by Ignacio Martín-Baró in El Salvador promoted the theoretical and methodological renewal of Latin American psychology.

2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-81
Author(s):  
Etienne Morales

This article focuses on the transformation of the carrier Cubana de aviación before and after the 1959 Cuban revolution. By observing Cubana's management, labour force, equipment, international passenger and freight traffic, this article aims to outline an international history of this Latin American flag carrier. The touristic air relationships between the American continent and Spain that could be observed in the 1950s were substituted – in the 1960s and 1970s – by a web of political “líneas de la amistad” [Friendship Flights] with Prague, Santiago de Chile, East Berlin, Lima, Luanda, Managua, Tripoli and Bagdad. This three-decade period allows us to interrogate breaks and continuities in the Cuban airline travel sector and to challenge the traditional interpretations of Cuban history. This work is based on diplomatic and corporative archives from Cuba, United States, Canada, Mexico, Spain and France and the aeronautical international press.


Author(s):  
Saulo de Freitas Araujo

Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) is one of the most famous names in the history of psychology. After passing into oblivion for nearly 60 years, in recent decades he has been celebrated in general psychology textbooks as the founding father of scientific psychology. However, this traditional portrait is incomplete and can lead to misunderstandings, as his psychological program is primarily understood in terms of experimental psychology. In order to complete this traditional picture, two aspects of his work must be emphasized and clarified: the role of Völkerpsychologie as the counterpart of experimental or individual psychology, and the interaction between his psychological program and his philosophical project. The ultimate meaning of Wundt’s conception of scientific psychology cannot be understood in isolation from his broader philosophical goals. Reading Wundt from the point of view of such interaction offers a deeper understanding of his work.


Author(s):  
Adrian C. Brock

Reflexivity has been a common theme in the literature on the history of psychology in recent years. Reflecting on the history of psychology is for historians of psychology the ultimate reflexive step. Germany is widely regarded as the homeland of “modern” or “scientific” psychology. It is here that the oldest surviving work with the word “psychology” in the title was published in 1590. It was also here that the first book with the title History of Psychology [Geschichte der Psychologie] was published in 1808. This reflects the fact that a substantial literature on psychology had already been published in Continental Europe by the end of the 18th century. Several other works on the history of psychology were published in German-speaking countries in the 19th century and in the years leading up to the First World War. English-speaking countries were relatively late in adopting psychology, but it grew rapidly in the United States when it was adopted, and the country was already the dominant power in the field by the outbreak of the First World War. Several works on the history of psychology were published in the United States around the same time, suggesting that disciplines and disciplinary history tend to appear simultaneously. This is because disciplines use their history to create a distinct identity for themselves. The history of psychology was widely taught in American psychology departments, and several textbooks were published to support these courses. E. G. Boring’s A History of Experimental Psychology (1929, 1950) was by far the most influential of these textbooks, and it has profoundly shaped the understanding of psychologists of the history of their field. For example, it was Boring who traced the history of the discipline to the establishment of Wilhelm Wundt’s laboratory for experimental psychology at the University of Leipzig in 1879. In 1979–1980, was widely celebrated as the “centennial” of psychology and the XXII International Congress of Psychology was held in Leipzig to mark the occasion. Prior to the 1960s, the history of psychology was mainly a pedagogical field, and it still is as far as many psychologists are concerned. However, it also became an area of specialization during this decade. This was partly due to a few psychologists adopting it as their main area of interest and partly due to historians of science becoming more interested in the field. A large body of scholarly literature has been produced, including some scholarly textbooks, but this literature exists side by side with more traditional textbooks for which there is still a significant demand. There are signs that the history of psychology has been facing difficulties as a branch of psychology in Europe and North America in recent years. However, interest in the field has been growing among psychologists in other parts of the world and among historians of science. This situation will inevitably have implications for the content of the field.


Author(s):  
Megan Raby

Biodiversity has been a key concept in international conservation since the 1980s, yet historians have paid little attention to its origins. Uncovering its roots in tropical fieldwork and the southward expansion of U.S. empire at the turn of the twentieth century, Megan Raby details how ecologists took advantage of growing U.S. landholdings in the circum-Caribbean by establishing permanent field stations for long-term, basic tropical research. From these outposts of U.S. science, a growing community of American "tropical biologists" developed both the key scientific concepts and the values embedded in the modern discourse of biodiversity. Considering U.S. biological fieldwork from the era of the Spanish-American War through the anticolonial movements of the 1960s and 1970s, this study combines the history of science, environmental history, and the history of U.S.–Caribbean and Latin American relations. In doing so, Raby sheds new light on the origins of contemporary scientific and environmentalist thought and brings to the forefront a surprisingly neglected history of twentieth-century U.S. science and empire.


Author(s):  
Denise Pereira de Alcantara Ferraz ◽  
Ana Maria Jacó-Vilela

O presente artigo decorre de pesquisa cuja temática foi a história do curso de Psicologia de Lorena, no Estado de São Paulo. A narrativa histórica do curso foi construída por meio de fontes documentais e iconográficas, com destaque para as fotografias, recortes de revistas, jornais da época, documentos oficiais e não oficiais, além de entrevistas narrativas com pessoas que fizeram parte da constituição desse curso. O objeto deste artigo é o Laboratório de Psicologia Experimental, visando demonstrar sua importância, em um primeiro momento, para a formação de educadores salesianos e, na década seguinte, para a criação do curso de Psicologia na Faculdade Salesiana. Apresentamos, inicialmente, a história dos salesianos, detendo-nos mais em sua chegada a Lorena, com a fundação do Colégio São Joaquim, e, mais especialmente, do Laboratório de Psicologia Experimental. Conclui-se que os salesianos, em busca de uma formação mais qualificada para seus padres docentes, encontraram, na psicologia experimental e na psicometria, uma forma de garantir a base científica para sua prática pedagógica. Alguns desses padres se interessaram pela psicologia e dedicaram suas vidas a essa ciência, fazendo pesquisas, ensinando, debatendo, formando novos profissionais e prestando serviços à região.Palavras-chave: Psicologia científica. Sistema salesiano de educação. Formação dos profissionais da educação.AbstractThis article accrues from a research which the theme was the history of the Psychology Course from Lorena-SP. The narrative about de course’s history was built by documentary and iconographic sources, with a highlight to the photos, magazine clippings, newspapers of the time, official and non-official documents; narrative interviews with people who were part of the this Psychology course constitution. This article’s object is the Experimental Psychology Laboratory, aiming to demonstrate its importance, at first, to the formation of educators and, on the following decade, to the creation of de Psychology course at the Fa- culdade Salesiana. It is presented, at first, the history of the salesianos, focusing more on their arrival to Lorena, with the institution of the Colégio São Joaquim and, especially, of the Experimental Psychology Laboratory. It was concluded that the salesianos, searching for a more qualified background for their teachers priests, they found in Experimental Psychology and Psychometry a way to ensure the scientific base for their teaching practice. Some of these priests have become interested in Psychology and have dedicated their life to it, doing researches, teaching, discussing, forming new professionals and providing services to the region.Keywords: Scientific psychology. Salesian education system. Formation education professionals.ResumenEse artículo se deriva de una investigación cuyo tema fue la historia de la carrera de Psicología de Lorena, en el estado de Sao Paulo - Brasil. La narrativa de la historia del curso se ha construido a través de fuentes documentales e iconográficas, en especial fotografías, periódicos de la época, documentos oficiales y no oficiales; entrevistas con personas que formaban parte de la constitución de este curso de Psicología. El objeto de este artículo es el Laboratorio de Psicología Experimental, y la demonstración de su importancia, en un principio, para la formación de educadores y de la próxima década para la creación de la carrera de Psicología en el Colegio Salesiano. Presentamos, inicialmente, la historia de los Salesianos, su llegada a Lorena, la fundación del Colegio de San Joaquín y muy especialmente, el Laboratorio de Psicología Experimental. Llegamos a la conclusión de que los Salesianos en la búsqueda por una formación más cualificada para sus sacerdotes maestros, han encontrado en la Psicología Experimental y Psicometría una forma de garantizar la base científica para su práctica. Algunos de estos sacerdotes se han interesado por la psicología y dedicado su vida a esa, haciendo la investigación, la enseñanza, el debate, la formación de nuevos negocios y ofreciendo un servicio a la región.Palabras-clave: Psicología científica. Sistema salesiano de educación. Formación de profesionales de la educación.


2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 320-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serge Nicolas ◽  
Zachary Levine

Though Alfred Binet was a prolific writer, many of his 1893–1903 works are not well known. This is partly due to a lack of English translations of the many important papers and books that he and his collaborators created during this period. Binet’s insights into intelligence testing are widely celebrated, but the centennial of his death provides an occasion to reexamine his other psychological examinations. His studies included many diverse aspects of mental life, including memory research and the science of testimony. Indeed, Binet was a pioneer of psychology and produced important research on cognitive and experimental psychology, developmental psychology, social psychology, and applied psychology. This paper seeks to elucidate these aspects of his work.


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