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[耶鲁大学] 【视频】心理学: 绪论 (一)

Lecture 1 - Introduction - H; F. Z9 l; r8 z! O* |) ~
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Overview:
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Professor Paul Bloom welcomes students and presents the course as a comprehensive introduction to the study of the human mind. Course readings and requirements are discussed. The five main branches of psychology are presented: neuroscience, which is a study of the mind by looking at the brain; developmental, which focuses on how people grow and learn; cognitive, which refers to the computational approach to studying the mind; social, which studies how people interact; and clinical, which examines mental health and mental illnesses./ Y7 D3 ^" ?9 a" f
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Reading assignment:% @4 A8 N% o6 ]" r

' b7 N; s- b. r2 x/ d- C( C2 m3 bGray, Peter. Psychology (5th edition), chapter 16 I$ o) Y( r" X# [  r/ x6 U
Stanovich, Keith. "How to Think Straight about Psychology." In The Norton Psychology Reader. Edited by Gary Marcus. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2006. pp. 27-37" s; g' _4 L. I# \: z! ]$ f
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本课程共二个视频,这是第一个% ^8 z$ K3 z: D. [! N2 e7 g# j

6 e- J4 p$ Z, c2 r% z, v' C" S【观看视频】(因网络原因,有时需耐心等待5-10秒以上时间)
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7 ^  x! [2 h/ i- V+ ~( }4 H4 i[ 本帖最后由 autumnwater 于 2008-12-14 16:02 编辑 ]

演讲文本

Introduction to Psychology: Lecture 1 Transcript# R" b, w! [) A
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January 17, 2007 4 V7 l( G4 L& |) f

0 U7 F- x& T1 R- {9 }' y! E' xProfessor Paul Bloom: I'd like to welcome people to this course, Introduction to Psychology. My name is Dr. Paul Bloom. I'm professor of this course. And what this is going to be is a comprehensive introduction to the study of the human mind. So, we are going to cover a very, very wide range of topics including brains, children, language, sex, memory, madness, disgust, racism and love, and many others. We're going to talk about things like the proper explanation for differences between men and women; the question of whether animals can learn language; the puzzle of what grosses us out; the problem of why some of us eat too much and what we could do to stop; the question of why people go crazy in groups; research into whether you could trust your childhood memories; research into why some of us get depressed and others don't.7 b$ D- F0 q. S
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The style of this is there'll be two lectures a week, as well as course readings. Now, to do well in the course, you have to attend both the lectures and do the readings. There will be some overlap. In some cases, the lectures will be quite linked to the readings. But there will be some parts of the readings that will not find their way into the lectures, and some lectures--some entire lectures that will not connect at all to the readings. So, to pursue this course properly you have to do both. What this means is that if you miss a class you need to get notes, and so you should get them from a friend or from the person sitting next to you. The slides are going to be made available online. So, one of the things you don't have to do is you don't have to write this down. You take notes any way you choose, but if you don't get anything on there it'll be available online. I'm going to post it in a format which will be black and white and easy to print out so you don't have to worry about this. But again, attending to the slides is not a substitute for attending class.
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7 V" c' d' v5 AThere's a textbook, Peter Gray's Psychology, 5th edition, and there's also a collection of short readings, The Norton Reader edited by Gary Marcus. It's an excellent textbook; it's an excellent collection, and you should get them both. They're available at Labyrinth bookstore on York Street or you get them online. I should note that last time I taught the course I used the Marcus Reader, and when Professor Marvin Chun taught his course last semester he used Peter Gray's 5th edition textbook. So, there may be a lot of used copies floating around. You should feel free to try to get one of those.
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/ D8 x# w" n0 L3 l( ^; m8 }The evaluation goes like this. There is a Midterm and there is a Final. The Final will not be held in the exam period, because I like to take long vacations. It will be held the last day of class. The exams will be multiple choice and short answer, fill in the blank, that sort of thing. Prior to the exams I will post previous exams online, so you have a feeling for how these exams work and so on. There will also be review sessions.
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Starting at the beginning of the third week of class – that is not next week but the week after – on each Monday I'm going to put up a brief question or set of questions, which you have to answer and your answers need to be sent to your teaching fellow. And you'll be given a teaching fellow, assigned one, by Friday. This is not meant to be difficult. It's not meant to be more than five, ten minutes of work, but the point of the question--15, 20 minutes of work, but the point of the question is to motivate people to keep up with the material and do the readings. These questions will be marked pass, fail. I expect most everybody could pass all of the questions but it's just to keep you on track and keep you going.0 p0 L& y7 k; ?# e) k5 z7 c
There is a book review, a short book review, to be written towards near the end of the class. I'll give details about that later on in the semester. And there's also an experimental participation requirement, and next week I'll hand out a piece of paper describing the requirement. The point of the requirement is to give you all experience actually seeing what psychological research is about as well as to give us hundreds of subjects to do our experiments on.9 Z, _, M3 p" [& Z: e- ?
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The issue sometimes comes up as to how to do well in the course. Here's how to do well. Attend all the classes. Keep up with the readings. Ideally, keep up with the readings before you come to class. And one thing I would strongly suggest is to form some sort of study groups, either formally or informally. Have people you could talk to when the--prior to the exams or--she's patting somebody next to her. I hope you know him. And in fact, what I'm going to do, not this class because it's shopping period. I don't know who's coming next class, or what but I'll set up a few minutes prior, at the beginning of the class, for people just to introduce themselves to the person next to them so they have some sort of resource in the class.
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+ S1 O7 i: w) G9 R( g3 {Now, this is a large class, and if you don't do anything about it, it can be very anonymous. And some of you may choose to pursue it that way and that's totally fine. But what I would suggest you do is establish some contact with us, either with me or with any of the teaching fellows, and I'll introduce the teaching fellows sometime next week. You could talk to us at the beginning or at the end of class. Unless there are special circumstances, I always try to come at least ten minutes early, and I am willing to stay late to talk to people. You could come by during my office hours, which are on the syllabus, and you could send me e-mail and set up an appointment. I'm very willing to talk to students about intellectual ideas, about course problems and so on. And if you see me at some point just on campus, you could introduce yourself and I'd like to meet people from this class. So, again, I want to stress you have the option of staying anonymous in this class, but you also have the option of seeking out and making some sort of contact with us. Okay. That's the formal stuff of the course.) x" }0 ]& K. C! F& h9 y& H
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What's this course about? Unlike a lot of other courses, some people come to Intro Psychology with some unusual motivations. Maybe you're crazy and hope to become less crazy [laugher]. Maybe you want to learn how to study better, improve your sex life, interpret your dreams, and win friends and influence people [laugher]. Those are not necessarily bad reasons to take this course and, with the exception of the sex part, this course might actually help you out with some of these things. The study of scientific psychology has a lot of insights of real world relevance to real problems that we face in our everyday lives. And I'm going to try--and when these issues come up--I'm going to try to stress them and make you try to think about the extent to which the laboratory research I'll be talking about can affect your everyday life: how you study, how you interact with people, how you might try to persuade somebody of something else, what sort of therapy works best for you. But the general goals of this course are actually I think even more interesting than that.8 b: u1 j" u. Q8 c  y% f
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What I want to do is provide a state of the art introduction to the most important topic that there is: us. How the human mind works, how we think, what makes us what we are. And we'll be approaching this from a range of directions. So, traditionally, psychology is often broken up into the following--into five sub-areas: Neuroscience, which is the study of the mind by looking at the brain; developmental, which is the area which I focus mostly on, which is trying to learn about how people develop and grow and learn; cognitive, which is the one term of the five that might be unfamiliar to some of you, but it refers to a sort of computational approach to studying the mind, often viewing the mind on analogy with a computer and looking at how people do things like understand language, recognize objects, play games, and so on. There is social, which is the study of how people act in groups, how people act with other people. And there is clinical, which is maybe the aspect of psychology that people think of immediately when they hear psychology, which is the study of mental health and mental illness. And we'll be covering all of those areas.- x& H4 [7 C) G& v% U9 j
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We'll also be covering a set of related areas. I am convinced that you cannot study the mind solely by looking at the discipline of psychology. The discipline of psychology spills over to issues of how the mind has evolved. Economics and game theory are now essential tools for understanding human thought and human behavior--those issues connecting to philosophy, computer science, anthropology, literature, theology, and many, many other domains. So, this course will be wide ranging in that sense.
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At this point I've been speaking in generalities so I want to close this introductory class by giving five examples of the sorts of topics we'll be covering. And I'll start with the topic that we'll be covering next week on Monday – the brain. This is a brain. In fact, it's a specific person's brain, and what's interesting about the brain is that little white mark there. It's her brain. It's Terri Schiavo's brain. You recognize her more from pictures like that. And what a case like this, where somebody is in a coma, is without consciousness as a result of damage to the brain, is a stark illustration of the physical nature of mental life. The physical basis for everything that we normally hold dear, like free will, consciousness, morality and emotions, and that's what we'll begin the course with, talking about how a physical thing can give rise to mental life.% h* ]3 Y6 _2 N' X7 g# g7 c

$ t* u8 W5 t. q+ h% s( x; qWe'll talk a lot about children. This is actually a specific child. It's my son, Zachary, my younger son, dressed up as Spider-Man, but it is Halloween. No, it's not Halloween. Oh. Well, there's more to say about that [laughter]. I study child development for a living and I'm interested in several questions. So, one question is just the question of development. Everybody in this room can speak and understand English. Everybody in this room has some understanding of how the world works, how physical things behave. Everybody in this room has some understanding of other people, and how people behave. And the question that preoccupies developmental psychologists is how do we come to have this knowledge, and in particular, how much of it is hard-wired, built-in, innate. And how much of it is the product of culture, of language, of schooling? And developmental psychologists use many ingenious methods to try to pull these apart and try to figure out what are the basic components of human nature.1 b* Q+ n- S6 u2 k: i; p  T! W9 ^
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There's also the question of continuity. To what extent is Zachary, at that age, going to be that way forever? To what extent is your fate sealed? To what extent could--if I were to meet you when you were five years old I could describe the way you are now? The poet William Wordsworth wrote, "The child is father to the man," and what this means is that you can see within every child the adult he or she will become. We will look and ask the question whether this is true. Is it true for your personality? Is it true for your interests? Is it true for your intelligence?
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. R0 i! V% ~9 Z' k# I% hAnother question having to do with development is what makes us the way we are? We're different in a lot of ways. The people in this room differ according to their taste in food. They differ according to their IQs; whether they're aggressive or shy; whether they're attracted to males, females, both or neither; whether they are good at music; whether they are politically liberal or conservative. Why are we different? What's the explanation for why we're different? And again, this could be translated in terms of a question of genes and environment. To what extent are things the result of the genes we possess? To what extent are our individual natures the result of how we were raised? And to what extent are they best explained in terms of an interaction? One common theory, for instance, is that we are shaped by our parents. This was best summarized most famously by the British poet Philip Larkin who wrote,
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7 A6 v5 h/ w) y! ?They mess you up, your mum and dad.
; U; T( o+ n) i+ o/ g5 _They may not mean to but they do.
) p* Y  B, V* d  X# x! hThey fill you with the faults they had
) J9 Z/ r2 t& i1 n. K) U; XAnd add some extra just for you.# x1 m8 J2 @! n

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Is he right? It's very controversial. You-- It's been a series of--a huge controversy in the popular culture to the extent of which parents matter and this is an issue which will preoccupy us for much of the course.! ^( _0 ]) x4 o7 L/ ?. Q) F" y; {! Y6 b
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A different question: What makes somebody attractive? And this can be asked at all sorts of levels but a simple level is what makes for a pretty face? So, these are, according to ratings, very attractive faces. They are not the faces of real people. What's on the screen are computer generated faces of a Caucasian male and a Caucasian female who don't exist in the real world. But through using this sort of computer generation, and then asking people what they think of this face, what they think of that face, scientists have come to some sense as to what really makes a face attractive, both within cultures and across cultures. And that's something which we're going to devote some time to when we talk about social behavior, and in particular, when we talk about sex. Not all attractiveness, not all beauty of course, is linked to sex. So, pandas for instance, like this panda, are notoriously cute, and I don't have anything to say about it really. It's just a cute picture [laughter].% U2 ?9 r- b5 X0 E5 a# o7 P

+ n5 j; s3 F  d4 s1 H$ d+ Y8 p1 gMorality is extremely central to our lives, and a deep question, which we will struggle with throughout most of the course, is the question of good and evil, evil and good. These three pictures exemplify different sorts of evil. What you could call institutional evil by somebody behaving cruelly toward somebody else, perhaps not due to malice but because of the situation that she's in. It has picture of Osama bin Laden, a mass murderer or driven by political cause? And then there's this guy on the bottom. Anybody know who he is? Ted Bundy. Who got that? Film that man [laughter]. No. Ted Bundy, exactly, and that's before we get into the technical stuff like crazy-evil, and we're going to have to come to terms with why some people are like that. And again, the same situation comes up. Is it part of your nature to be good or bad or is it largely due to the situation that you fall in? And there's a lot of some quite spectacular experiments that try to tease that apart.9 X3 Z7 a7 r- ?7 d4 ~

6 i. M( n) f+ l7 @8 s: a5 AIf we're going to talk about evil, we should also talk about good. These are pictures of two notoriously good men, Oskar Schindler and Paul Rusesabagina, each who at different times in history saved the lives of many, many people at great risk to themselves. Schindler in the Holocaust, and then the other guy, in – and I can't pronounce his name – Rusesabagina, in Rwanda. And they both had real good movies made about them. But what's interesting with these cases is you couldn't have predicted ahead of time that they would be heroes. And one personal issue within any of us is what would we do in such situations?
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Finally, throughout this course we will discuss mental illness. Now, towards the end of the class I want to devote a full week to discussing major disorders like depression and anxiety, because of their profound social importance. Such disorders are reasonably common in college students. Many people in this room are currently suffering from a mood disorder, an anxiety disorder or both, and I won't ask for a show of hands but I know a lot of people in this room are on some form of medication for this disorder. And we'll discuss the current research and why people get these disorders and what's the best way to make them better.& a/ D$ j  P, `! d# h" v* w. ?
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But I also have a weakness for the less common mental disorders that I think tell us something really interesting about mental life. So, when we talk about memory, for instance, we'll talk about disorders in memory, including some disorders that keep you from forming new memories as well as disorders of amnesia where you forget the past. And these are extraordinarily interesting for all sorts of reasons. Early in the course, in fact I think next week, we will discuss, no, later on in the course, in the middle of the semester, we will discuss an amazing case of Phineas Gage.& C' R# l: _" U1 q  [
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Phineas Gage was a construction worker about 100 years ago. Due to an explosion, a metal pipe went through his head like so. Miraculously, he was not killed. In fact, his friends--it went through his head, went--ended up 100 feet away, covered with brains and blood. And Phineas Gage sat down and went, "uh, oh." And then on the way to the hospital they stopped by a pub to have some cider. He was not blind, he was not deaf, he was not retarded, but something else happened to him. He lost his sense of right and wrong. He lost his control. He used to be a hard-working family man. After the accident he lost all of that. He couldn't hold a job. He couldn't stay faithful to his wife. He couldn't speak for five minutes without cursing. He got into fights. He got into brawls. He got drunk. He lost his control. He ended up on a circus sideshow traveling through the country with the big steel pipe that went through his head. And this is again an extraordinary example of how the brain can give rise to the mind, and how things that go wrong with the brain can affect you in a serious way.
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  V, J* z& m% F& @, H8 v9 g' AWe'll discuss cases of multiple personality disorder, where people have more than one personality. And also, discuss the debate over whether such cases are true or not; whether they could be taken as a real phenomena or a made-up phenomena, which is--there is a matter of a lot of controversy. And then, we'll even discuss some rarer cases like Capgras syndrome. Capgras syndrome is typically – there's hundreds of cases, not many – hundreds of cases. It's typically the result of some sort of stroke, and what happens to you is very specific. You develop a particular delusion, like it's getting dark [lights dim in the room, laughter follows]. And the delusion is that the people you love the most have been replaced. They've been replaced by aliens or robots [lights go on] – thank you – by Martians, by CIA agents, by trained actors and actresses. But the people--But the idea is, the people you care for the most you believe are gone. And this could lead to tragic consequences.$ Y7 W8 {1 D4 F1 {% A4 H

/ o5 Y  g# Y  Z% W, F) f2 KCapgras syndrome is associated with a very high level of violence. One man in Australia a couple of years ago was under the delusion that his father was replaced with a robot and cut off his head. A related disorder involving the very same parts of the brain is called Cotard's syndrome. And Cotard's syndrome is you believe that you're dead; you are persuaded that you're dead. You're walking around. You know you're walking around. And you know that there are people around, but you think that you're dead. And what's striking about these is--it's not--these are not just sort of big, screwy problems of messed up people. Rather, they're located--they're related at a pinpoint level to certain parts of your brain. And we're going to talk about the best modern theories as to why these syndromes occur.
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( N7 T( n: t* q  R! e% ^Now, the reason to be interested in them, again, is not because they're frequent. They aren't. And it's not because of some sort of gruesome, morbid curiosity. Rather, by looking at extreme cases, they can help us best understand normal life. Often by looking at extremes it throws into sharp contrast things we naturally take for granted. The issue of psychopathy, of people who, either due to brain damage or because they are born that way, have no moral understanding, can help us cope with questions of free will and responsibility; of the relationship or difference between mental illness and evil. Multiple personality cases force us to address the question of what is a self. To what extent are all of us composed of multiple people, and to what extent are we a single unified person over time? Cases like Capgras are important because they tell us about how we see the world. They tell us for instance that there is a difference between recognizing something in the sense that you could name it, and knowing what it is. And so, by studying these abnormal cases we could get some insight into regular life. So, that's the end of the illustration of the example topics. The syllabus lists many more.
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I'll end by telling you that there's a lot of stuff that we'll be talking about, that I want to talk about, that I am not expert in. And fortunately, there is a community at Yale of the best scholars and teachers on the planet. And so, it would be a shame for me not to use them to cover some of these issues. And so, I'm going to include four guest lecturers. The first one is Dr. Marvin Chun who teaches the Introduction to Psychology course in the fall and is my competition. And he's going to give an amazing lecture on cognitive neuroscience, especially the cognitive neuroscience of faces. Dr. Susan Nolen-Hoeksema is the world's authority on depression, and in particular, on sex differences and depression, and she's going to talk about this towards the end of the course. Kelly Brownell is going to talk--is head of the Rudd Center, focuses on obesity, eating disorders, dieting, and he'll talk about the psychology of food. And finally, Dr. Peter Salovey, Dean of Yale College, is going to come to us on Valentine's Day and tell us everything he knows about the mysteries of love. All of these details are in the syllabus and I'll stick around and answer questions. Hope to see you next week.
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[end of transcript]

课本Texts

1.  Gray, Peter. Psychology. New York: Worth Publishers, 2007.
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& `1 |( }) ?6 R: s4 h5 R/ f2.  Marcus, Gary, ed. The Norton Psychology Reader. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2006.

好棒..!

就是文本太长了.." }/ f+ b+ P) z8 M7 Q! t
我翻译要好长时间.
總的來說我過得很好!

回复 4# yogamylove 的帖子

翻译一篇积分是很多的,最重要的是大家非常非常的期待。拿出您的激情,让您的才华在这儿横溢吧。

版主
$ G- N5 s5 T# o$ S0 K$ D% h/ p/ ^* j我翻译的有出入怎么办啊.?
總的來說我過得很好!
没关系,这是一个非常好的机会,大家互相交流学习,共同进步!大胆参与吧!期待您的作品呢。

好的.

谢谢你的鼓励..!
總的來說我過得很好!

这个是我自己翻译的,有些不对的地方请大家谅解,也请大家提出宝贵意见..!

本帖最后由 autumnwater 于 2009-1-27 22:43 编辑
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: A, c% E; F4 K2 g! Z5 h- F8 o. yPaul教授欢迎学生们并且准备这个对大脑学习综合性的知道课程作为一份礼物.课程读物和必需品是需要讨论的.呈现出来的有五个心理学的主要分支学科:神经系统科学--这个是在研究我们大脑的学习;实验心理学--这是一个集中研究人们是怎样成长和学习上的学科;认知心理学--这是一个引用计算的方法来接近大脑的研究的学科;社会心理学--研究人们是怎样互相影响的学科;临床心理学--是检验心理健康和心理疾病的一门科学..% H; a9 A; ^$ \
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我特别欢迎大家来听这堂课,心理学的介绍.我的名字是Dr. Paul Bloom.我是这个课程的教授.并且这是对人类心灵的研究.所以,我们覆盖的面积很广,包括大脑的课题的范围也是很广的,孩子,语言,两性,记忆,疯狂的,讨厌的,种族的差别主义,和爱,还有许多其他的.我们将要进行谈论一些类似的像适当的在男人和女人之间解释的事情;这个问题就是是否动物能学会语言;我们的总产量之谜;一个为什么人们中的一些人能吃很多东西并且能够停止下来的问题;为什么人们在群体中更疯狂的问题;调查是否你会相信你的童年记忆;调查为什么我们中的一些人会沮丧而其他人不会.
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心理学的风格是每个礼拜将会有两个讲座,和课程的读物是一样的。现在,在课程上好好做,你必须参加这两个讲座并且去做阅读。这将会有一些重叠。在某些方面,讲座和阅读是有些联系的。但是有一些阅读中的部分不会找到融入讲座的方法,而且一些演讲--一些完整的讲座是不会和阅读有一点联系的。所以,适当的去继续这个你所上的课程。要是你缺课了还想得到笔记怎么办,你可以从挨着你坐着的人那里得到笔记。网上会提供幻灯片。因此,其中一件事你没有做的就是你没有写下来。你可以选择任意一种方法来记笔记,但是要是你从幻灯片里什么也得不到。我要发布它并且易于打印出来,这样您就不必担心这个。但是,看幻灯片是不能代替参加课堂的
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有一个课本,Peter Gray的心理学,第五版本,并且它还收录了一些简短的读物,这个诺顿读者是被加里马库斯编辑的。。它是一本优秀的课本,是一个很好的收录,并且你能从中得到很多。它们在纽约街的迷宫书店是可被买到的或者你可以从网上看到。我要指出的是我最后一次教我当然用马库斯阅读器,并且当Marvin Chun 教授下学期讲他的课的时候是会用Peter Gray的第五版本的心理学。因此会有一些有用的东西在我们身边。你应该随时尝试其中的一个。
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  o. \: L0 ]2 X这次的评估是这样的。有一个期中和期末测试。最终的测试是不会在考试时期举行,因为我想要花长时间休息。它将在最后几堂课上举行。考试将是一个多选和单选,填空以及简答。在考试之前我会在线粘贴几个以前的试卷,因此你们会对怎么考试和学习有个感觉等等。也将会有几个复习的课程。4 w; J& F0 y2 {  |0 n1 T

( p  g: _+ s! o8 b8 }) Z在最初的第三周课程开始-即这周后而不是下周-在每个周一我将会提出一个简短的或者一组问题,这个问题你必须回答并且你的答案会跟随着你的教案。你明天将有一个教案,研究员,在周五。这不意味这将会很困难。它也不意味这这将是一个超过五分十分的工作,但是这个问题的要点--15或者20分的工作,但是这个问题的主要动机是人们能够跟上和阅读这个材料。这个问题将决定你是及格或者是挂科。我期待着你们所有人都能给答出所以的问题前提是你能跟着问题并且继续下去。
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- k' E" @7 v; {有一本复习书,一个简短的复习,将会在接近课的尾声时写出来。晚些在这学期我会给你们细节。并且也有一个实验的参与要求,下周我将会发出几篇关于这个要求的描述。这个要求的重点是为了给你看心理研究的实际经验,是关于以及给我们数以百计的科目来做实验。7 F6 p2 X  k2 t9 V& q, `  [( T- m

# d% Z& R  t% p有时会遇到一些问题例如怎么才能学好这门课。这是怎样做的好。参加所有的课。保持阅读。保持在课前做些阅读就很完美了。有一件事情我强烈建议就是分成几个学习小组,可以使正式的也可以是非正式的。学生们能在考试前或者在适当的时候和临近他的人讨论。我希望你能理解他。事实上,我将要做一些事,但不是这堂课因为这是不是购物时间。我不知道谁会来下堂课,或者在之前的几分钟我将会建立些什么,在课程的最初,让人们仅仅去介绍他们自己给临近的人认识以至于你们在课堂上有一些资源。5 ]& j; V, D* g# T+ t
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现在,这是一个大课堂,并且如果你不想做任何事,你可以匿名。也许你可能选择继续从事它并且那是很好的。但是我建议你应该明确的和我们有些联系,可以是我也可以是教师们中的一些人,并且我会在下周介绍我的同伴们给你们。你可以在可开始之前和结束后和我们讨论。除非有一些特别的情况,我都会至少早来十分钟,我也很希望可以留下了和学生们关于知性的想法、课程的问题等等进行讨论。如果你在校园里看到了我,你可以自我介绍并且我想在课堂上遇见你们。所以,再次,我想强调你在课堂上是可以选择匿名的,但是。好的你也可以选择寻求制造某种联系我们。好的,现在开始这堂课正式的内容
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3 z6 l# B, u' k这个课程是关于什么的呢?不像大多的其他课程。一些人怀着不同的动机来介绍心理学。也许你是疯狂的并且希望被认为不怎么疯狂。【笑】也许你想要知道怎样学习更好,来提高你的性生活,解释你的梦境,和赢得朋友以及对其他人有影响。【笑】这些不是必要的坏原因来学习这门课程,除了性的部分,这个课程实际上也许会帮助你在这其中的一些东西上。心理学科学的研究有许多对真实世界和我们每天生活中必须面对的问题的中肯的洞察。并且我将要尝试--当这些问题出现-我将要强调它们和使你尝试去想关于这个我所讨论的实验室范围的调查能否影响你的生活:你怎样去学习,你怎样和其他人相互影响,你怎样去劝说一些事中的人以及其他的,什么类型的疗法会最适合你。但是课程一般的目标实际上是我认为比以前的更有趣。
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我想要做的是提供一种技术发展水平来介绍这最重要的客体那就是:我们。人类的思想是怎样工作的,我们怎么想的,什么使我们成为我们。并且我们将会接近这个指令的范围。所以,传统上,心理学在一下五个主要领域内是经常被打破的:神经系统科学--这个是在研究我们大脑的学习;实验心理学--这是一个集中研究人们是怎样成长和学习上的学科;是一个试图去研究人们是怎样发展、成长和学习;认知心理学--这是五个学科中你最不熟悉的学科,是一个引用计算的方法来接近大脑的研究的学科,它也引用电脑来分析观察人们的观点并且研究人们是怎样做事情像理解语言,识别对象,玩游戏等等。社会心理学--研究人们在群体中的表现,人们是怎样互相影响的学科;临床心理学--这是也许人们一听到心理学立刻想到的外观,是检验心理健康和心理疾病的一门科学。我们将要研究这些领域。; o8 `+ j" ]* G; x, _. x/ L

8 B% K+ v$ {4 u# Q我们也会覆盖一些有联系的领域。我深信你独自的研究这些想法由浏览心理学的分支学科。心理学的分支学科分散出了思想是怎样变体的的问题。经济学和博弈论理论是现今理解人类行为的必要的工具--这些问题和哲学有些联系,电脑科学,文学,神学以及许许多多的其他领域。因此,这门课程在感觉上是范围很广的。; a* S% I$ w$ Y9 A  q$ {% O9 n! E
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在这一点上我已经大概说了很多所以我想用五个我们研究将要覆盖的课题中的例子来结束这个简介。并且我要在下周一进行我们所要研究的课题.-大脑.事实上,这是一个特殊的人脑,并且有意思的是对大脑白色的标记.这是她的大脑.这是Terri Schiavo的大脑.你从像这样的照片中识别出她的大脑.也有一个案件像这样,某些人的大脑处在昏迷的方位,是一种无意识对大脑伤害的结果,是一个赤裸裸的插图,物理性质的精神生活。对于所有的物质基础,我们通常万事如意,喜欢自由意志、意识、道德和情感,那是我们的课程开始,谈的是物质的东西可以引起精神生活。: x4 P7 p/ l3 c; W9 {  ?3 }' B( E
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我们会关于孩子讨论很多。这确实是一个特别的孩子。我的儿子,Zachary,我的小儿子,曾打扮成蜘蛛侠的样子,但是是在万圣节时。因此,有一个问题仅仅是这个问题的发展。在这个房间里的所有人都能说并且理解英语。在这个房间里的所有人对世界是怎样工作的都有一些了解,物理物质是怎样起作用的。在这个房间里的所有人对其他人多少会有些了解和人们的举止是怎样的。这里的问题,发展心理学家是我们如何得来了这方面的知识,尤其是与内部的天生的有多少密切联系。这与文化的成果、语言、学校教育有多少联系,而且发展心理学家使用了遇到独创的方法来试图去把这些分为几部分和算出自然人类是由那些基本零件组成的。
總的來說我過得很好!

接上一贴.!

本帖最后由 autumnwater 于 2009-1-27 22:44 编辑
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, `* R1 ?& b0 J: f也有一个连续的问题。在这个时代他是在多大程度上会一直这样呢?你的命运在多大程度上密封?要是我在你五岁的时候遇见你在多大的程度上我会用什么样的方式来描述现在的你?英国诗人威廉•华兹华斯曾写过,“孩子使父亲成为男人。”这就是你可以看见每个孩子都会有大人陪着。我们会看出并问出这样的问题是否这是真实的。对于你的个性这是真实的麽?对于你的兴趣这是真实的麽?对于你的理解力这是真实的麽?  k2 o7 l4 v2 \* P
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另一个与发展有联系的问题是是什么使我们用这种方式存在着呢。我们在某种程度上有很大不同。这个房间里的人对食物的口味也是不同的。他们的智商也是不同的;是否他们是有进取心的或者是害羞的;是否他们会吸引雄性、雌性还是两者都有;是否他们擅长音乐;是否在政治上他们是个开放的人或者是保守的。为什么我们不同?我们不同的解释是什么?还有,这点是否会通过基因和环境来改变我们所拥有的。在某种情况上我们自己的个性是怎养被我们养成的?在什么情况下通过相互作用是最好的解释?一个普通的理论,例如,我们的外貌是由我们的父母给的。著名的英国诗人菲利普•拉金所写的就是最好的概括。* ]( }+ u4 i0 D8 I. A+ \3 B6 x
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你的爸爸妈妈把你组成好
# r' Y' s& }7 D他们不可能意味着但他们做了; m& {! p" `9 f1 o# m2 Z
你充满了他们的确定
$ v3 r6 N. t# R1 l: l再加一些额外的东西就成了你1 p7 Q9 h: l5 S4 X% k+ n# K" Q
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他说的对么?这争论是很大的。你-你已经是一系列的-一个巨大的流行文化中引起很大程度上与父母有关系,这是一个问题,将占据我们大部分的课程。% `# c0 L* z& _9 ~2 M

% Y- I7 K: r( h有一个不同的问题:什么使某些人具有吸引力呢?并且这可能被问在不同水平上但是在一个初级水平是什么才能保住你的面子呢?所以,这些是根据等级评定的,很吸引人的面孔。他们不是真实人的面孔。再电脑屏幕上生成的白种人群在真实世界是根本不存在的。但是尽管用各种各样的电脑生成,然后会问你对这个那个的面孔的感想,科学家已经对什么是真正吸引人的面孔有了些了解,既是通过也是经过文化。那是我们将要奉献一些时间来研究我们讨论的社会行为,特别是当我们讨论性。一点也没有魅力,一点也不漂亮的课程是和性连接的。所以,用熊猫来举例,像这个熊猫,是众所周知的可爱伶俐,我实在没有什么可说的了。它仅仅是一个可爱的照片【笑】
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我们生活的非常地中心是道德,这是一个深奥的问题,我们会挣扎在遍及大多数的课程中这些问题,这是一个好与坏的问题,正面与邪恶的。这三幅照片就是不同种类邪恶的例子。你会称某人的行为可爱对于其他的别的人惯例上的邪恶,也许不是有什么恶意而是由于她处在的环境。它有Osama bin Laden的画,一个大规模的杀人犯或者受到政治的原因驱使?然后这个家伙在底部。任何人都知道他是谁?Ted Bundy.谁得到了那个?像电影的那个人。【笑】不,确切的是Ted Bundy,并且那是在我们进入工艺的材料之前像疯狂的恶魔,我们将不得不同意为什么一些人会像那样。而且,相同的情景出现了。你本质的一部分将要称为好的或者坏的又或者是在很大程度上因为你所处的环境所决定的?在一些很惊人的试着去取笑那部分的实验的许多问题。9 O$ N0 A5 t( V) p+ ^

- y( \+ l9 U* e3 u, z- e. i要是我们来讨论邪恶,我们也应该来讨论些好的。这两个是众所周知的好人的图片。Oskar Schindler 和 Paul Rusesabagina,他们中的每一个都在历史的不同时期拯救过许多认得生命,许多人是冒着他们自己的生命危险。Schindler在大屠杀中,和其他的伙计,我不能叫出他的名字-Rusesabagina,在卢旺达。而且都有真实的电影来讲述他们。但是这些事件有趣的是你不能在时代的前面预言他们会称为英雄。而且一个我们中的一些人的个人问题是我们在这样的环境中做了些什么?
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最后,通过这个课程我们将会讨论精神上的问题。现在,快到课程的结束我想要花一整周的时间去讨论主修的科目像沮丧和焦虑,由于他们的极深的社会重要性。这样的适度的障碍在大学学生中是很常见的。在这个房间里的一些人现在正在遭受这心情的障碍。并且我们将桃林这个现今的调查和为什么人们会有障碍以及什么是使他们变得越来越好的最佳办法。
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但是我也有一个对少见的普通的我想告诉大家一些真是的有趣的和我们的精神生活有关的精神障碍。所以,当我们讨论记忆,例如:我们讨论在记忆中的障碍,包括一些使你保持在形成新的记忆和当你忘了过去的事情像得了健忘症一样。并且这些是各种各样非常有趣的原因。在这个课程的最初,事实上我认为下周,我们就会讨论,不是,会晚一点在这个课程中,在这个学期的期中吧,我们会讨论Phineas Gage的一些令人惊奇的案件。2 ?! |" U  A' m& \( C& a

( g; }  t5 D0 g; s! N& ^Phineas Gage 在一百多年前是一个建筑工人。因为一次爆炸,一个钢管像这样传进了脑袋。奇迹般的,他并没有死掉。事实上,他的朋友们—钢管穿入了他的大脑—停止在100英尺的地方,被大脑和血液覆盖着。并且他坐起来之后走了,“噢”在他去医院的路上他还去了酒吧喝了点苹果酒。他不是盲人也不是耳聋,更不是迟钝,但是一些其他的事情在他身上发生了。他失去了对对错的感觉。他失去了控制。他以前是一个为家庭努力工作的男人。但是在那个事故发生之后他失去了所有。他不能做工作。他不能对他的妻子保持忠诚。他说话五分钟内一定会有咒人的话。他和别人打架,和比人争吵。他醉酒,失去了控制,他的生命是在一个世界巡回的马戏团的大大的车轮压在他的脑袋上结束的。这又一次特别的证明了这个大脑是怎样导致思维的例子,并且大脑会用一种特别的方式影响你导致事情变得更糟。
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' q  ]/ P5 F3 B; G- U: U$ p我们也会讨论一些多重性的变态人格,人们不只有一型人格。并且,对于这些问题的争论是否像这样一个案件是真实的;是否他们可以被理解为一个真实的现象或则一个人造的现象,有一个问题就是有很多争议。然后,我们甚至会讨论一些罕见的案例想Capgras syndrome。Capgras syndrome是典型地-有数以百计的案例,不是特别多-几百个案例。这是一些典型的各种各样的突然打击的结果,并且在你身上发生了什么是非常特别的。你发函了一个特别的错觉,像感觉天边黑了【在灯光昏暗的房间里,随后笑声】而且这个错觉,你最爱的那个人身上可以替换。他们被替代为外国人或者是机器人【灯渐渐亮了起来】( L  ~6 Z0 T7 U# o. m  V

: r1 B& u) R* X--谢谢你们—由火星,由中央情报据的代理人,由被训练的演员们。但是这些人们—但是这个想法是,你最关心的你最信任的人已经一去不复返了。并且这能导致悲剧的结果。
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卡氏综合症是已非常高水平的暴力相联系的。在澳大利亚的一个人几年以前是在幻觉之下认为他的父亲是被机器人代替了并被砍下了头。一个有联系的障碍包括这个相同的大脑部分被叫做卡氏综合症。卡氏综合症是你相信你已经死了;你被暗示你已经死了。你一直转来转去。你知道你一直在转来转去。而且你知道有一些人在你身边,但是你认为你死了。关于这些什么是引人注目的—它不是—这不仅仅是种大的、扭曲的问题的确是的爱好艺术的人乱糟糟的。而不是,被定为的—他们是与一个极小的水平上去确信你大脑中的一部分是有联系的。并且我们将要进行关于最现代的理论像为什么这些综合症会发生的讨论
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现在,这个原因将对他们感兴趣,而且,并不是因为他们是频繁的。他们不是。它不是因为一些多种可怕的,病态的好奇心。而不是,由于浏览极端的案例,他们能帮助我们最大程度的理解正常的生活。经常看它扔到极端的事情时,我们很自然地与之形成鲜明对比的是理所当然的。有精神错乱的问题的人们,既因为毁坏了大脑也是因为他们出生的方式,没有道德上的理解,能帮助我们对问题的自由处理意志和责任;他们之间的关系或者在精神疾病和邪恶之间有所不同。多重个性的案例把我们集中在解决这个问题的自我。在某种程度上我们中的大多数由多重人们组成,并且随着时间的流逝我们是单一的统一的?像卡氏综合症这样的案例是很重要的因为他们告诉我们关于我们是怎样看这个世界的。他们和我们举例子有一个在你可以在感觉上识别某些事的不同,并且知道它是什么。所以,用研究这些不正常的案例我们能得到一些对有规律生活的洞察力。因此,那就是这些案例课题介绍的结尾。教学大纲列出了更多。; g2 m, Y" s1 `6 h2 [
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我会以告诉你有很多的物质我们将要讨论作为结尾我想要去讨论,我并不熟练于。并且幸运的是,有一个在星球上最好的学者和老师的耶鲁大学的团体。因此,这将是一种耻辱,我不会用它们来遮盖其中一些问题。而且,我将要进行包括嘉宾演讲的四场讲座,关于性差别和沮丧,和她将要在接近这个课的尾声部分讨论这个。Kelly Brownell将要讨论—是Rudd Center的主要麽?集中在肥胖,吃东西的障碍,节食,以及她将关于心理学的事物进行讨论。最后。Peter Salovey教授,耶鲁大学的系主任,,也将要在情人节的是来来看我们并且告诉我们他所知道的关于爱的神秘的所有事情。所有的这些细节将会在课程表上并且我会在附近走动和回答问题。希望在下礼拜见到你!
總的來說我過得很好!
高人啊,牛啊,太感谢你的翻译了,不知道怎么表达我的感激, 谢谢!
不谢啊..
* f( r, E: I1 j有什么不对的地方帮我改改..
! J8 Q% T# E% a2 {6 R我需要批评哈..
總的來說我過得很好!
非常感激yogamylove优秀的翻译工作,我们将会奖励你300积分。希望你再接再励!
' Q8 C$ k/ r# o( ~2 O1 k: G" c( j我们期待你更多的翻译作品。3 X% a+ K5 I0 g, i. K+ Y
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新年快乐!
谢谢!' s1 i* _4 {: ?$ f; Y* Y
呵呵,下一个马上出炉..!
+ o' x) R( @& T- b7 Y所有人:新年快乐!
# P+ g5 M* \9 J  j) \; U; t             学习进步!
總的來說我過得很好!
哇,厉害。强烈的支持!
太好了!谢谢!
好地方
& i/ }! x" s0 f  以后常来光顾
利国利民的好事~~~
前几段有些缺失,可惜我英语不咋滴,补不上
翻译的话就像这样贴在下面就好了么?
本帖最后由 摇晃的精灵 于 2009-2-2 12:35 编辑 $ q1 ]6 h) S9 V% P  G: K: F) m9 X
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是的。直接贴在课程回复下面就可以了(以后会开一个听写和翻译专版)。非常感谢您的热情参与!
好啊  看来世界上还是好人多啊
呵呵,翻译工作真的很累的,谢谢yogamylove的辛勤工作!
爱自己,等待相爱!
1# autumnwater
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0 M  P- n! Z( T& R# e8 a' N谢谢!很好的资料啊!消化中~
强人!啊!谢谢楼主和楼上翻译,都是强人!向强人致敬!
好东西 要是能下载下来就好了 ,谢谢各位
听的很清楚 翻译很赞 顶一下
初访,感觉很棒~~
LOST IN FUTHER
很不错,!支持
非常,绝对,狠支持。
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