Deck 1: Introduction
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Deck 1: Introduction
1
Popper saw scientific method as involving 3 stages.Which of the following is not one of the stages?
A)problem
B)theories (proposed solutions)
C)prestudy analysis
D)criticism
A)problem
B)theories (proposed solutions)
C)prestudy analysis
D)criticism
prestudy analysis
2
The ultimate authority of science has always been:
A)logic
B)rigorous theory
C)the opinion of great,clear-thinking individuals
D)empirical observation
A)logic
B)rigorous theory
C)the opinion of great,clear-thinking individuals
D)empirical observation
empirical observation
3
Science has two major components:
A)empirical observation and law
B)empirical observation and theory
C)rationalism and empiricism
D)correlational laws and causal laws
A)empirical observation and law
B)empirical observation and theory
C)rationalism and empiricism
D)correlational laws and causal laws
empirical observation and theory
4
Historiography is:
A)another term for psychology
B)the study of the proper way to write history
C)the use of photographs in presenting history
D)another term for historicism
A)another term for psychology
B)the study of the proper way to write history
C)the use of photographs in presenting history
D)another term for historicism
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5
The prediction and control of events can best be accomplished using:
A)scientific law
B)a group of interrelated scientific laws
C)correlational propositions
D)causal laws
A)scientific law
B)a group of interrelated scientific laws
C)correlational propositions
D)causal laws
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6
According to the author of your text,psychology is best defined:
A)as the science of behavior
B)by the professional activities of psychologists
C)as the study of the psyche or mind
D)as the art of behavioral control and prediction
A)as the science of behavior
B)by the professional activities of psychologists
C)as the study of the psyche or mind
D)as the art of behavioral control and prediction
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7
The approach to studying the history of psychology that involves showing how various individuals or events contributed to changes in an idea through the years is called:
A)great-person approach
B)Zeitgeist
C)historical development approach
D)historicism
A)great-person approach
B)Zeitgeist
C)historical development approach
D)historicism
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8
Zeitgeist means :
A)the spirit of the times
B)about the same thing as presentism
C)that the history of anything must be selective
D)about the same thing as historicism
A)the spirit of the times
B)about the same thing as presentism
C)that the history of anything must be selective
D)about the same thing as historicism
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9
To avoid the almost unending search that would result if one attempted to document all of the factors that caused a historical event,your author maintains that any history must be:
A)selective
B)inaccurate
C)written about a narrow topic
D)written only about recent events
A)selective
B)inaccurate
C)written about a narrow topic
D)written only about recent events
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10
A consistently observed relationship between two or more classes of empirical events defines a:
A)scientific theory
B)scientific law
C)scientific problem
D)rational deduction
A)scientific theory
B)scientific law
C)scientific problem
D)rational deduction
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11
A scientific theory has several functions.Which of the following is not a function of scientific theory?
A)organize empirical observations
B)generate confirmable propositions
C)act as a guide for future observations
D)to guide the scientist in rational descriptions
A)organize empirical observations
B)generate confirmable propositions
C)act as a guide for future observations
D)to guide the scientist in rational descriptions
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12
Which of the following is not part of the traditional view of science?
A)empirical observation
B)theory testing
C)assumption of dualism
D)search for lawful relationships
A)empirical observation
B)theory testing
C)assumption of dualism
D)search for lawful relationships
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13
____ describe how classes of events vary together in some systematic way.
A)Scientific theories
B)Scientific laws
C)Causal laws
D)Correlational laws
A)Scientific theories
B)Scientific laws
C)Causal laws
D)Correlational laws
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14
Historicism refers to the belief that:
A)the present state of a discipline should act as a guide in writing that discipline's history
B)the present state of a discipline represents its highest and best state of development
C)only the past is important
D)the past should be studied for its own sake without attempting to show the relationship between past and present.
A)the present state of a discipline should act as a guide in writing that discipline's history
B)the present state of a discipline represents its highest and best state of development
C)only the past is important
D)the past should be studied for its own sake without attempting to show the relationship between past and present.
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15
One of the most perplexing concepts in the history of philosophy and science has been:
A)causation
B)determinism
C)contiguity
D)correlation
A)causation
B)determinism
C)contiguity
D)correlation
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16
As discussed in the book,there are several reasons to study the history of psychology.Which of the following is not one of those discussed in the book?
A)to provide new perspectives and deeper understanding of concepts and ideas
B)recognition of fads and fashions in psychology
C)to see how psychology fits into social/cultural history
D)to avoid repetition of mistakes
A)to provide new perspectives and deeper understanding of concepts and ideas
B)recognition of fads and fashions in psychology
C)to see how psychology fits into social/cultural history
D)to avoid repetition of mistakes
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17
The approach to writing a history of psychology that combines the best of several approaches is referred to as:
A)presentism
B)eclecticism
C)historicism
D)the Zeitgeist approach
A)presentism
B)eclecticism
C)historicism
D)the Zeitgeist approach
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18
Which two methods of attaining knowledge are combined in science?
A)intuition and rationalism
B)rationalism and empiricism
C)introspection and controlled observation
D)empiricism and faith
A)intuition and rationalism
B)rationalism and empiricism
C)introspection and controlled observation
D)empiricism and faith
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19
The ____ assumes that everything that occurs is a function of a finite number of causes.
A)determinist
B)rationalist
C)empiricist
D)none of these choices
A)determinist
B)rationalist
C)empiricist
D)none of these choices
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20
Presentism assumes that:
A)only the present is important
B)to truly understand something you must be present to observe it
C)the present state of a discipline is its best,most fully developed state
D)history should be studied for its own sake without regard for how historical events relate to present events
A)only the present is important
B)to truly understand something you must be present to observe it
C)the present state of a discipline is its best,most fully developed state
D)history should be studied for its own sake without regard for how historical events relate to present events
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21
During the preparadigmatic stage of the development of a science:
A)true science is not performed
B)rival camps compete with each other for dominion of the discipline
C)rival camps work together to come to a consensus
D)one camp dominates the discipline
A)true science is not performed
B)rival camps compete with each other for dominion of the discipline
C)rival camps work together to come to a consensus
D)one camp dominates the discipline
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22
According to Popper,the theories of Freud and Adler cannot be considered scientific because they:
A)make too many risky predictions
B)make postdictions rather than predictions
C)make predictions rather than postdictions
D)are too easily falsified
A)make too many risky predictions
B)make postdictions rather than predictions
C)make predictions rather than postdictions
D)are too easily falsified
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23
Persistent observations that a currently accepted paradigm cannot explain is called a(n):
A)anomaly
B)paradigm
C)preparadigm
D)revolution
A)anomaly
B)paradigm
C)preparadigm
D)revolution
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24
According to Kuhn,the set of beliefs,values,assumptions,and a particular way of doing research which are accepted by a group of scientists is called:
A)a metaphysical orientation
B)the religious component of science
C)a paradigm
D)a correlational law
A)a metaphysical orientation
B)the religious component of science
C)a paradigm
D)a correlational law
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25
According to Kuhn,all of the following are true of normal science except:
A)it results in some phenomena being explored in great depth
B)it causes scientists to ignore potentially important phenomena
C)it stimulates the creative search for novel phenomena
D)it is what most scientists engage in throughout their professional careers
A)it results in some phenomena being explored in great depth
B)it causes scientists to ignore potentially important phenomena
C)it stimulates the creative search for novel phenomena
D)it is what most scientists engage in throughout their professional careers
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26
Who believes that science cannot be characterized by any set of prescribed methods,principles,or rules?
A)Popper
B)Kuhn
C)Feyerabend
D)Heisenberg
A)Popper
B)Kuhn
C)Feyerabend
D)Heisenberg
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27
According to the author of your text,contemporary psychology is:
A)a preparadigmatic discipline
B)a multiparadigmatic science
C)in the revolutionary stage of development
D)a single paradigmatic science
A)a preparadigmatic discipline
B)a multiparadigmatic science
C)in the revolutionary stage of development
D)a single paradigmatic science
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28
If any conceivable observation supports a theory,Popper would conclude that the theory is:
A)weak
B)useless
C)the type that all sciences hope to develop
D)falsifiable
A)weak
B)useless
C)the type that all sciences hope to develop
D)falsifiable
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29
The ____ stresses a person's beliefs,emotions,perceptions,values,and goals as determinants of behavior.
A)indeterminist
B)nondeterminist
C)physical determinist
D)psychical determinist
A)indeterminist
B)nondeterminist
C)physical determinist
D)psychical determinist
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30
Explaining phenomena after they have already occurred is called:
A)prediction
B)hindsight bias
C)postdiction
D)falsifiability
A)prediction
B)hindsight bias
C)postdiction
D)falsifiability
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31
The belief that human behavior is determined but the causes of behavior cannot be accurately measured is called:
A)nondeterminism
B)uncertainty principle
C)soft determinism
D)hard determinism
A)nondeterminism
B)uncertainty principle
C)soft determinism
D)hard determinism
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32
Popper disagrees with the traditional view that scientific activity starts with:
A)a problem
B)empirical observation
C)logical deduction
D)a theory
A)a problem
B)empirical observation
C)logical deduction
D)a theory
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33
The highest status that a scientific theory can attain is:
A)confirmed
B)not yet confirmed
C)scientific law
D)falsifiability
A)confirmed
B)not yet confirmed
C)scientific law
D)falsifiability
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34
When behavior results from many causes,we say that it is:
A)synchronistic
B)fortuitous
C)overdetermined
D)indeterminant
A)synchronistic
B)fortuitous
C)overdetermined
D)indeterminant
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35
A psychologist who believes that human behavior is indeed determined but the causes can never be accurately known would be a(n):
A)indeterminist
B)psychical determinist
C)nondeterminist
D)physical determinist
A)indeterminist
B)psychical determinist
C)nondeterminist
D)physical determinist
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36
Which of the following is not emphasized by the physical determinist?
A)conflicts
B)genes
C)environmental stimuli
D)cultural customs
A)conflicts
B)genes
C)environmental stimuli
D)cultural customs
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37
For Popper,a nonscientific theory:
A)is insignificant
B)is unimportant
C)can still be useful
D)is especially useful
A)is insignificant
B)is unimportant
C)can still be useful
D)is especially useful
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38
According to Popper,what distinguishes a scientific theory from a nonscientific theory?
A)clarity
B)the use of mathematical symbols
C)the principle of falsifiability
D)the assumption of determinism
A)clarity
B)the use of mathematical symbols
C)the principle of falsifiability
D)the assumption of determinism
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39
Which of the following is not a type of observable determinism?
A)biological
B)sociocultural
C)environmental
D)psychical
A)biological
B)sociocultural
C)environmental
D)psychical
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40
According to Popper,scientific activity begins:
A)with a problem
B)with empirical observation
C)when a paradigm is formulated
D)when enough individuals agree to engage in such activity
A)with a problem
B)with empirical observation
C)when a paradigm is formulated
D)when enough individuals agree to engage in such activity
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41
Which of the following holds humans responsible for their actions?
A)nondeterminist
B)hard determinist
C)soft determinist
D)both nondeterminist and soft determinist
A)nondeterminist
B)hard determinist
C)soft determinist
D)both nondeterminist and soft determinist
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42
The ____ tends to assume that the human mind takes in information passively.
A)rationalist
B)empiricist
C)nativist
D)epistemologist
A)rationalist
B)empiricist
C)nativist
D)epistemologist
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43
A currently popular way of explaining mind-body relationships that claims mental states emerge from brain activity is called:
A)reification
B)emergentism
C)naive realism
D)namification
A)reification
B)emergentism
C)naive realism
D)namification
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44
If you took a monistic position on the mind-body question,which of the following does your position most likely represent?
A)materialism
B)occasionalism
C)psychophysical parallelism
D)interactionism
A)materialism
B)occasionalism
C)psychophysical parallelism
D)interactionism
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45
Some believe that although cognitive events are a result of brain activity,such events cannot cause behavior.Such a belief represents:
A)materialism
B)interactionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)occasionalism
A)materialism
B)interactionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)occasionalism
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46
The contention that what we experience mentally accurately reflects the physical world is called:
A)epiphenomenalism
B)naive realism
C)irrationalism
D)preestablished harmony
A)epiphenomenalism
B)naive realism
C)irrationalism
D)preestablished harmony
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47
Believing that because something has a name it also has independent existence is called:
A)reification
B)emergentism
C)naive realism
D)namification
A)reification
B)emergentism
C)naive realism
D)namification
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48
The belief that humans have free will would be proposed by a(n):
A)indeterminist
B)nondeterminist
C)psychical determinist
D)physical determinist
A)indeterminist
B)nondeterminist
C)psychical determinist
D)physical determinist
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49
The position on the mind-body question claiming that mental and bodily events are coordinated through God's intervention is called:
A)interactionism
B)interventionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)occasionalism
A)interactionism
B)interventionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)occasionalism
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50
The ____ believes that because cognitive processes such as intentions,values,and beliefs intervene between experience and behavior,humans are responsible for their actions.
A)hard determinist
B)soft determinist
C)indeterminist
D)all of these choices
A)hard determinist
B)soft determinist
C)indeterminist
D)all of these choices
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51
The study of knowledge is called:
A)epistemology
B)psychophysics
C)metaphysics
D)rationalism
A)epistemology
B)psychophysics
C)metaphysics
D)rationalism
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52
____ promotes that life can never be completely explained in terms of material things and mechanical laws.
A)Vitalism
B)Determinism
C)Monism
D)Materialism
A)Vitalism
B)Determinism
C)Monism
D)Materialism
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53
The position on the mind-body question claiming that both mental events and bodily responses occur simultaneously even though the two events are independent of each other is called:
A)interactionism
B)epiphenomenalism
C)psychophysical parallelism
D)double aspectism
A)interactionism
B)epiphenomenalism
C)psychophysical parallelism
D)double aspectism
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54
The claim that God arranges for mental and bodily events to be perfectly coordinated is called:
A)psychophysical parallelism
B)double aspectism
C)preestablished harmony
D)idealism
A)psychophysical parallelism
B)double aspectism
C)preestablished harmony
D)idealism
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55
The view that cognitive events that emerge from brain activity can cause behavior is representative of:
A)materialism
B)interactionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)free will
A)materialism
B)interactionism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)free will
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56
____ stresses the emotional or unconscious determinants of human behavior.
A)Naive realism
B)Irrationalism
C)Mechanism
D)Vitalism
A)Naive realism
B)Irrationalism
C)Mechanism
D)Vitalism
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57
The ____ tends to assume that the human mind takes in information actively.
A)rationalist
B)empiricist
C)nativist
D)epistemologist
A)rationalist
B)empiricist
C)nativist
D)epistemologist
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58
According to the author of your text,which of the following would not be part of the response to the question,"Is psychology a science?"
A)some aspects of psychology are scientific
B)some aspects of psychology are not yet scientific but someday they may be
C)some aspects of psychology will probably never be scientific
D)all of these choices are appropriate answers
A)some aspects of psychology are scientific
B)some aspects of psychology are not yet scientific but someday they may be
C)some aspects of psychology will probably never be scientific
D)all of these choices are appropriate answers
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59
Which of the following represents a dualistic position on the mind-body question?
A)idealism
B)materialism
C)monism
D)epiphenomenalism
A)idealism
B)materialism
C)monism
D)epiphenomenalism
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60
The position that states that mental and physiological reactions are two aspects of the same experience and cannot be separated is called:
A)preestablished harmony
B)double aspectism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)psychophysical parallelism
A)preestablished harmony
B)double aspectism
C)epiphenomenalism
D)psychophysical parallelism
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61
Sociocultural determinism is a form of psychical determinism.
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62
Psychology has always been and is still defined as the study of the psyche or mind.
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63
Many influential philosophers/scientists such as Galileo and Kant have claimed that psychology could never be a science.
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64
What we experience mentally is called subjective or phenomenal reality.
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65
Two general classes of scientific laws are correlational laws and causal laws.
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66
Behavioral psychologists maintain that the same principles govern the behavior of both humans and nonhuman animals.
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67
Discuss the question "is psychology a science?" by addressing,as the text does,the various views of determinism,indeterminism,and nondeterminism.
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68
Popper and Kuhn agree completely on their views of normal science.
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69
Vitalism states that living things contain a force that nonliving objects do not.
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70
Popper proposed that for a theory to be scientific,it cannot make risky predictions.
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71
Rationalists postulate a passive mind.
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72
Zeitgeist is described as "spirit of the times."
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73
Nondeterminism requires that a person is responsible for their behavior.
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74
At various times in history a soul,mind,or self had been postulated in order to account for:
A)life after death
B)the mind-body relationship
C)the irrational aspects of human behavior
D)the unity and continuity of human experience
A)life after death
B)the mind-body relationship
C)the irrational aspects of human behavior
D)the unity and continuity of human experience
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75
Both nativists and empiricists emphasize the role of experience in explanations of origins of human attributes.
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76
A monist tries to explain everything in terms of one type of reality.
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77
Discuss the different reasons/purposes for studying the history of psychology.
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78
Contrast the scientific views of Popper and Kuhn.
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79
The study of knowledge is called metaphysics.
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80
Discuss the question "what is science?" by presenting the characteristics and concepts involved in the scientific enterprise.
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