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Mary Whiton Calkins

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Title: Mary Whiton Calkins


1
Mary Whiton Calkins
  • (1863-1930)

2
Overview
  • Brief timeline/biography of Mary Whiton Calkins
  • Historical antecedents that influenced the
    individual
  • Zeitgeist in which individual was developing her
    ideas
  • Specific professional obstacles/struggles of the
    individual
  • Experiments/research/clinical data supporting her
    ideas/theories
  • Strengths and weaknesses of her ideas/theories
  • Influence of individual on the event and ideas of
    her time and on later events in psychology

3
Timeline/Biography of Mary Whiton Calkins
  • Born March 30, 1863
  • Attended Smith College and earned degrees in both
    the classics and philosophy
  • Held a teaching position at Wellesley in Greek
    and philosophy
  • Showed talent in psychology and was appointed to
    head the experimental lab
  • Died at home on February 27, 1930

4
Historical Antecedents Family
  • Eldest of 5 children
  • Very Devoted to her family, close knit
  • Maude
  • Sister that died in 1883 after her first year at
    Smith College
  • Diagnosed with inflammatory rheumatism
  • It was an experience which permanently
    influenced her thinking and character
  • Her first encounter with deep grief
  • The following academic year Mary stayed home
    took private lessons
  • She re-entered Smith College in the Fall of 1884
    as a senior and graduated with a concentration in
    classics and philosophy

5
Historical Antecedents Family
  • Wolcott Calkins
  • Presbyterian minister
  • Designed supervised Marys education
  • Arranged an interview with President of Wellesley
    College
  • She was offered a position there as a tutor in
    Greek she began teaching in the Fall of 1887
  • Mary stayed in the Greek Department for 3 years

6
Historical Antecedents Trip to Europe
  • Stayed for 16 weeks
  • Briefly attended the University of Leipzig
  • Broadened Marys knowledge of the classics
  • Became acquainted with an instructor from Vassar
    College Abby Leach
  • Leach was planning a trip to Greece invited
    Calkins
  • Studied modern Greece and the classics

7
Historical AntecedentsWellesley College
  • A professor in the Department of Philosophy
    noticed her talent for teaching
  • Philosophy department was planning to introduce
    work in psychology as part of new curriculum and
    would need someone to teach courses in this new
    area
  • Calkins was excited about new opportunity, but
    the position was open to her if she first
    prepared herself by studying psychology for 1
    year
  • Problems meeting this condition
  • Admittance was not offered to her because of her
    gender
  • Go abroad?
  • Study with G. T. Ladd at Yale, William James at
    Harvard, G. S. Hall at Clark University?
  • It was Harvard that Calkins went to take seminars
    with William James Josiah Royce (October 1,
    1890 Harvard considered and approved petition)

8
Historical AntecedentsWilliam James Harvard
University
  • Attended seminars conducted by James at Harvard
    University
  • Helped Calkins face barriers of prejudice and
    discrimination
  • Harvard University refused to grant her a
    graduate degree, even though she had done the
    work
  • Calkins examination was described as the most
    brilliant examination for the Ph.D. that we have
    had at Harvard William James
  • Calkins influenced by William Jamess chapter on
    the stream of consciousness in Principles of
    Psychology

9
Historical Antecedents Other
  • Experimental Psychology lab (1890)
  • While attending seminars at Harvard, Calkins also
    studied in an experimental psychology lab with
    Edmund Sanford at Clark University
  • Influenced by the experimental procedure
  • Richness Precision
  • Fall of 1891, returned to Wellesley College as an
    instructor in Psychology/ the Department of
    Philosophy and introduced a new course into the
    curriculum
  • Psychology approached from the philosophical
    standpoint
  • 1891 Established a lab for experimental
    psychology at Wellesley College

10
Zeitgeist
  • Discrimination against women
  • Disagreed outright with belief that there were
    inherent sex differences in mental abilities
  • Variability Hypothesis
  • Darwinian idea of male variability
  • Notion that men show a wider range a variation of
    physical and mental development that women
  • The abilities of women are seen as more average

11
Zeitgeist
  • Mary Calkins presented her system of
    self-psychology and contrasted it to the rival
    systems of the day
  • Structuralism, functionalism, behaviorism, hormic
    psychology, Gestalt psychology, and
    psychoanalysis
  • Wundt Titchener
  • In 1900, Calkins presented her self-psychology
  • Departure from Wundt and Titchener system that
    was dominant in American Psychology
  • Structuralism
  • Study of the contents of consciousness
  • Introspection as the main source of data

12
Zeitgeist
  • Functionalism
  • James System of psychology concerned with mind
    as it is used in an organisms adaptation to its
    environment
  • Behaviorism (1913)
  • Watson Focused solely on observable acts that
    could be described in objective terms
  • Hormic Psychology
  • McDougall emphasis on the emotional and
    purposive (goal-oriented) side of human nature
  • Gestalt Psychology
  • Opposition to elementalism holistic
  • Psychoanalytic Movement
  • Freud Emphasis on instinctive and emotional side
    of human nature the unconscious mind

13
Calkins Struggles and Obstacles
  • Educational Struggles
  • Struggles at Harvard
  • Struggles for her Ph.D.
  • Other Struggles

14
Professional Obstacles
  • Calkins had the opportunity to teach a philosophy
    class at Wellesley College, but had to study
    psychology for one year
  • There were few Psychology departments for Calkins
    to study in. Also few departments accepted
    females as students
  • Could have studied at Yale or Michigan
  • Both schools were too far away from Calkins home
  • Neither included a laboratory, which was
    important for Calkins to study physiological
    psychology

15
Struggles at Harvard
  • Calkins was not allowed to study at Harvard
  • President Eliot said, her presence would receive
    an angry reaction for the governing body at
    Harvard
  • Her father and the President of Wellesley college
    petitioned to let Calkins study at Harvard
  • On October 1, 1890 Calkins was allowed to
    sit-in on the lectures at Harvard. William
    James and Josiah Royce also supported her
  • Calkins wanted to further her education by
    working with Munsterberg who was coming to
    Harvard to do research
  • Once again she was refused the opportunity to
    study at Harvard with Munsterberg
  • She was later allowed to sit in but not as a
    student only as a guest

16
Struggles for her Ph.D.
  • Calkins finished all of her work for her Ph.D.,
    but she was refused her Ph.D. because she was a
    woman and also she was not a student
  • Munsterberg wrote a letter to the president and
    fellows of Harvard that Calkins should be a
    candidate for her Ph.D. His request was
    considered and refused
  • A group 13 psychologist who were Harvard
    graduates and professors of prestigious
    institutions sent in a petition to the president
    of Harvard requesting that Calkins should get her
    Ph.D.
  • Harvard said No adequate reason for granting
    Calkins the degree
  • Calkins was offered her Ph.D. from Radcliffe
    college the Harvard for women. She refused the
    offer because she earned her degree at Harvard
  • Calkins thought that Harvard was making a
    distinction between the sexes by withholding the
    Harvard Ph.D. from female students who did the
    work, took the same exams at Harvard like their
    counterparts

17
Other Struggles
  • Calkins opposed the Variability hypothesis and
    the differentiation between men and womens right
    to vote because these issues held her back from
    reaching her goals
  • Calkins came up with the technical method for
    studying memory called paired associates
    however, Titchner took full credit for it

18
Experiments/Research/Clinical Data Supporting her
theorys and ideas
  • Dream Research
  • - studied the contents of individual dreams by
    having them record, in detail, their dreams over
    a seven week period
  • - discovered that there was a close connection
    between the dream-life and waking life, and that
    the dream will reproduce in general, the persons,
    places, and events of recent sense perception.
  • -rejected Freuds theory of dreams dreams did
    not represent ones unconsciousness.

19
Experiments/Research/Clinical Data Supporting her
Theorys and Ideas Cont.
  • Paired-Associate Tasks (Memorization Method)
  • - wanted to look at how frequency, dominance,
    regency,
  • and vividness influenced memory
  • - research method involved showing individuals a
    series of colors paired with numbers
  • - tested how many numbers the individual could
    recall that had been paired with colors
  • - discovered that individuals were more likely
    to remember any number that was joined with any
    given color vs. numbers that were vividly colored
    or a number that was last paired with a color.

20
Experiments/Research/Clinical Data Supporting her
Theorys and Ideas Cont.
  • Self-Psychology
  • - Believed that the self is the central factor
    in psychology
  • - Three important elements of the self the
    self, the object, and the selfs
    relationship/attitude toward the object

21
Self-Theory
  • Self includes
  • The self that his changed
  • The self that remains the same
  • The self that is unique
  • The self that is a unity of perceptions,
    memories, thoughts and feelings
  • The self that is related to the larger social and
    physical community in which it lives
  • Calkins said the soul is a conscious being. It is
    the self.
  • This is different than the Structuralist view,
    which asserted that it was the organism that was
    experiencing sensations, not a indefinable being.

22
Strengths of Self-Theory
  • The theory allowed for individual differences
    in studying mental processes
  • Calkins did not deny the validity of atomistic
    (idea) psychology. She believed they were two
    equally valid approaches
  • Original theory put forth by a female
    psychologist in a an aversive climate

23
Weaknesses of Self-Theory
  • The self is indefinable (Calkins, 1915)
  • Tested through introspection, which had
    questionable empiricism
  • Connected to her ideas about ethics and morality
    (Wentworth, 1999)

24
Calkins Influence Then
  • The timing of Calkins theory did not mesh well
    with the scientific ideals of her peers (Not
    objective experimental methods)
  • We still find certain residues of the soul
    theory, masquerading in modern discussion as
    accounts of empirical or quasi-empirical
    realities (Troland, 1929)

25
Calkins Influence Later
  • Psychoanalytic self psychology
  • Heinz Kohut, MD (1913-1981)
  • Theoretical basis for most of the therapeutic
    benefits of contemporary psychoanalysis. 
  • Rejects importance of innate Freudian sexual
    drives in the organization of the human psyche
  • First major psychoanalytic movement in the United
    States to recognize the critical role of empathy
    in explaining human development and
    psychoanalytic change. 

26
Summary
  • Family huge influence
  • Studied under James, Royce, Sanford
  • Never received her degree from Harvard
  • Contrasted all her work against the Zeitgeist,
    Variability Hypothesis
  • Paired-Associate Task was a big influence on
    learning theory
  • Self-theory was a contrast to the times, and it
    was not embraced by her contemporaries

27
References
  • Bumb, J. Mary Whiton Calkins. Retrieved March
    4, 2004, from
  • Calkins, Mary W. An Introduction to Psychology.
    New York Macmillan Co., 1904.
  • Calkins, Mary W. A First Book in Psychology. New
    York Macmillan Co., 1911.
  • Calkins, M. W., (1917). The case of self against
    soul. Psychological Review, 24, 278-
  • 300.
  • Calkins, M.W. (1911). General standpoints Mind
    and body. Psychological Bulletin, 8,
  • 14-19.
  • Calkins, M.W. http//www.earlham.edu/harriem/cont
    ributions.htm
  • Christopher, Green D. Autobiography of Mary
    Whiton Calkins. Classics in the History
  • Of Psychology. 27 Jan. 2004. Mar. 2000
    http//www.psychclassics.yorku.ca
  • Furumoto, L. (1980). Mary Whiton Calkins
    (1863-1930). Psychology of Women Quarterly, 5,
    55-68.
  • Furumoto, Laurel, Mary Whiton Calkins. Psychology
    of Women Quarterly, Vol 5(1).

28
References
  • Madigan, S. OHara, R. (1992). Short-term
    memory at the turn of the century Mary Whiton
    Calkinss memory research. American
    Psychologist, 47, 170-174.
  • Minton, H. L. (2000). Psychology and gender at
    the turn of the century. American Psychologist,
  • 55, 613-615.
  • Schultz, D. P. Schultz, S. E. (2004). A
    history of modern psychology (8th Edition).
  • Wadsworth Belmont.
  • Seigfried, C. H. (1993). 1895 letter from Harvard
    Philosophy department. Hypatia, 8, 230-231.
  • Wentworth, P. A. (1999). The moral of her story
    Exploring the philosophical and religious
  • commitments in Mary Whiton Calkins
    self-psychology. History of Psychology, 2,
  • 119-131.
  • Women's Intellectual Contributions to the Study
    of Mind and Society. Mary Whiton
  • Calkins. http//www.webster.edu/wollflm/calkins.
    html
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