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A History of Modern Psychology 5th Edition by C. James Goodwin - Test Bank (Chapter 1- 15) $19.79   Add to cart

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A History of Modern Psychology 5th Edition by C. James Goodwin - Test Bank (Chapter 1- 15)

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A History of Modern Psychology 5th Edition by C. James
Goodwin - Test Bank (Chapter 1- 15)

,Content

Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15

, A History of Modern Psychology 5th Edition by C. James
Goodwin - Test Bank(chapter 1)

Multiple Choice

NOTE: The following items also appear in the online study guide that is available to students: 2, 6, 14, 24,
28, 39

1. Robert Watson was instrumental in developing interest in psychology’s history in the 1960s. During
this time he accomplished all of the following except
a. played a key role in forming APA’s Division 26 (on history)
b. was first Director of doctoral program in psychology’s history at UNH
c. established and became the first director of the Archives of the History of American
Psychologyd. had a key role in forming Cheiron

2. Which of the following is the least important reason for studying history (in general, not just
psychology’s history)?
a. it enables us to understand the present better
b. knowing history is the only sure way to predict the future
c. it prevents us from thinking that things were always much better in the past
d. it helps us to understand human nature

3. Early in the chapter, what was the purpose of describing the formation of the Association for
Psychological Science (APS)?
a. to show that understanding the present requires knowing the past
b. to show that the most important reason for studying history is to be able to predict the future
c. to show that psychology can never be a unified discipline
d. to show that most research psychologists know little and care little about history

4. What was the purpose of the Boorstin quote from his essay The Prison of the Present?
a. to show that a full understanding of the present requires knowing the past
b. to show that the most important reason for studying history is to be able to predict the future
c. to show that knowing history prevents us from thinking that things were always better in
thepast than they are now
d. to show that most psychologists prefer to live in the past

5. Which of the following is the least valuable reason for studying psychology’s history?
a. it will enable us to avoid the mistakes of the past
b. it will help synthesize the content learned in other psychology courses
c. it helps enable us better understand the present status of psychology
d. issues of importance 100 years ago are still important today

6. Furumoto’s concept of “old” history is characterized by
a. internal history

, b. naturalistic history
c. an emphasis on historical context
d. historicism

7. Furumoto’s concept of “new” history is characterized by
a. internal history
b. personalistic history
c. an emphasis on the history of ideas
d. historicism

8. Someone taking an “old” history stance would, according to Furumoto, be likely to say that
a. Jones’s 1920 study is important because it anticipated Smith’s 1997 research
b. the history of psychology is, in essence, the history of great psychologists
c. modern psychology has progressed significantly from the days of the introspective analysisd.
all of these
9. Old history thinking typically includes
a. origin myths
b. emphasizing the zeitgeist
c. historicist rather than presentist views
d. denying the importance of history

10. Tracing modern experimental social psychology to Triplett’s 1898 study that simulated competition
among cyclists is an example of
a. the importance of the zeitgeist
b. an eponym
c. an origin myth
d. a multiple

11. Which of the following is true about an origin myth in psychology?
a. it usually describes events that never actually happened
b. it falsely gives credit to a discovery to person X when person Y in fact anticipated the
discoverysome years before person X
c. it glorifies the zeitgeist at the expense of failing to recognize the value of individual genius
d. it gives the false impression of a clear starting point for a scientific approach to some area
ofpsychology

12. If you accuse someone of being excessively “presentist,” it means that this person
a. believes the present can only be understood by understanding the past
b. thinks the past should be evaluated by using the standards of the present
c. believes history is of no importance at all to the present
d. thinks the present can be understood (it is happening now); the past can never be understood

13. Someone taking a naturalistic approach to history would say
a. Darwin revolutionized biology; the 19th century would have been completely different
withouthim
b. history changes because special people (e.g., Einstein) force history to change

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