Wilhelm Wundt: biography of the father of scientific psychology
Wundt (1832 - 1920) is considered one of the precursors of the science of behavior.
In the history of psychology there are few figures as relevant as Wilhelm Wundt. Wilhelm Wundt.
In the 19th century, this researcher gave birth to scientific psychology and was one of the first to face the practical and epistemological problems of studying mental processes with the intention of extracting knowledge that could be generalized to many people. In this article I have proposed to make a brief review of his role as the initiator of a science that until not so long ago was one of the many facets of philosophy.
Wilhelm Wundt: biography of a fundamental psychologist
I know many people who, when they have set out to start studying psychology on their own as part of a hobby, begin by reading books by classical philosophers such as Plato or Aristotle.
I do not know exactly why they start with this kind of reading, although I can imagine: they are well-known authors, their books are easily accessible (although difficult to interpret) and, moreover, they represent the first attempts to systematically examine the workings of the human mind.
However, the works of these philosophers are not fundamentally about psychology (however much etymologically the word psychology has its roots in the origins of Western philosophy) and, in fact, neither do they tell us anything about the methodologies used today in behavioral research. The origin of behavioral science is relatively recent: it took place at the end of the 19th century and was led by Wilhelm Wundt.
Wundt's role in psychology
Psychology seems to have been part of our existence for a long time now; basically, since we started asking questions about how we think and how we perceive reality, millennia ago. However, this is only half true. Psychology is not simply the formulation of questions about behavior and mental processes, nor has it existed independently of the development of our history.
That is why, although in certain respects it can be said that philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle laid the foundations of psychology, the person in charge of making this science emerge as an independent discipline was Wilhelm Wundta German researcher who, in addition to being a philosopher, invested much effort in making mental processes amenable to study through the experimental method, something that had not been done in previous centuries. This is the reason why, by general consensus, psychology is considered to have been born in 1879, the year in which Wundt opened the first experimental psychology laboratory in history in Leipzig.
The new investigation of the mind
Until the 19th century, the task of many philosophers had been to create theories about the workings of the human mind based on speculation. Authors such as David Hume o René Descartes talked about the nature of ideas and the way we perceive our environment, but they did not build their theories on experimentation and measurement. Ultimately, their job was to examine ideas and concepts rather than to explain in detail what the human body is like. Descartes, for example, talked about innate ideas not because he had come to the conclusion that they exist from controlled experiments, but from reflection.
However, in Wundt's time, the development of the study of the brain and advances in statistics helped to lay the foundations necessary to begin to study behavior and sensation by means of measuring instruments. Francis Galtonfor example, developed the first tests for measuring intelligence, and around 1850 Gustav Fechner began to study the way in which physical stimulation produces sensations according to its intensity and the way in which our senses are stimulated.
Wundt took the scientific study of the mind further by attempting to generate theories about the global functioning of consciousness based on experimentation. If Galton had sought to describe psychological differences between people in order to find statistical trends and Fechner had used laboratory tests to study sensation (a very basic level of consciousness), Wundt wanted to combine statistics and experimental method to generate a picture of the deeper mechanisms of the mind, Wundt wanted to combine statistics and the experimental method to generate a picture of the deeper mechanisms of the mind.. That is why he decided to stop teaching physiology at the University of Heidelberg and move to Leipzig to investigate the more abstract mental processes.
How did Wundt do his research?
Much of Wilhelm Wundt's experiments were based on the methodology used by Gustav Fechner in studying perception and sensation. For example, for a short time a person was shown a pattern of lights and asked to say what he or she experienced. Wundt went to a great deal of trouble to make it possible to compare cases with each other.The time that a stimulus should last was strictly controlled, as well as its intensity and form, and the situation of all the volunteers that were used also had to be controlled so that the results obtained would not be contaminated by external factors such as position, noises coming from the street, etc.
Wundt believed that from these controlled observations in which variables are manipulated, a picture of the basic secret mechanisms of the mind could be "sculpted". What he wanted was, fundamentally, to discover the simplest pieces that explain the functioning of consciousness to see how each one works and how they interact with each other, in the same way that a chemist can study a molecule by examining the atoms that form it.
However, he was also interested in more complex processes, such as selective attention. Wundt believed that the way in which we attend to certain stimuli and not to others is guided by our interest and our motivations; unlike what happens in the rest of living beings, Wundt said, our will plays a very important role in directing our mental processes towards goals decided by our own criteria.. This led him to defend a conception of the human mind called voluntarism.
Wundt's legacy
Nowadays Wundt's theories have been discarded, among other things, because this researcher relied too much on the introspective method, that is, on thethat is, in obtaining results according to the way people talk about what they feel and experience. As we know today, although each individual has a privileged knowledge about what is going on in his or her head, this knowledge is almost never valid and is the product of a large number of biases and perceptual and cognitive limitations; our organism is made in such a way that knowing objectively what the psychobiological processes operating in its back room are like is much less of a priority than surviving without getting too distracted.
That is why, among other things, Cognitive Psychology today takes into account those unconscious mental processes that, despite being different from those theorized by Sigmund Freud, powerfully influence our way of thinking and feeling without us realizing it and without us having the possibility of guessing their causes by ourselves.
However, despite the logical limitations of Wilhelm Wundt's work (or perhaps because of them), the entire community of psychology today is indebted to this pioneer for being the first to systematically use the experimental method in a laboratory dedicated exclusively to psychology.
(Updated at Apr 12 / 2024)