All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Defining the Subject

    • The Great Courses

    Is psychology really science at all? A look at the controversy that has engulfed psychology for centuries.

  • S01E02 Ancient Foundations-Greek Philosophers and Physicians

    • The Great Courses

    The ancient philosophers-in wrestling with the problems of knowledge, good and evil, governance, and how mankind should live-lay the foundations for the discipline of psychology.

  • S01E03 Minds Possessed-Witchery and the Search for Explanations

    • The Great Courses

    A look at how abnormal conduct-whether considered insanity or the act of a "witch"-has attracted society's special attention, sometimes with horrifying consequences.

  • S01E04 The Emergence of Modern Science-Locke's "Newtonian" Theory of Mind

    • The Great Courses

    A new emphasis on experimental investigation produces great achievements in natural science and technology, as well as insistent questions about whether the same methods can explain the workings of the mind and society.

  • S01E05 Three Enduring "Isms"-Empiricism, Rationalism, Materialism

    • The Great Courses

    An examination of the great debate over how knowledge and belief come to be and what this means for the definition of psychology.

  • S01E06 Sensation and Perception

    • The Great Courses

    An introduction to the methods by which sensation and perception are investigated and measure, including an introduction to the science and psychophysics.

  • S01E07 The Visual Process

    • The Great Courses

    One of the more scientific sides of experimental psychology is revealed in this look at the discipline's most studied and best known system-a true miracle of organization and function.

  • S01E08 Hearing

    • The Great Courses

    A look at another of the body's most acute senses-and the threats posed to this complex and delicate system by the constant auditory assault of 20th-century industrial and urban life.

  • S01E09 Signal-Detection Theory

    • The Great Courses

    The more difficult a discrimination or detection task is, the harder it is to measure. A look at how signal-detection theory is providing answers, especially in the particularly difficult area of measuring perception.

  • S01E10 Perceptual Constancies and Illusions

    • The Great Courses

    Can we really trust our senses? A surprising look at how knowledge and perception work together.

  • S01E11 Learning and Memory: Associationism-Aristotle to Ebbinghaus

    • The Great Courses

    A first look at the fascinating area of memory and how it works, including an introduction to the use of "mnemonics."

  • S01E12 Pavlov and the Conditioned Reflex

    • The Great Courses

    The famous "salivating dog" experiments were a harbinger of the behaviorist era to come but went well beyond what we learned about in school.

  • S01E13 Watson and American Behaviorism

    • The Great Courses

    An impatient crusader casts his vote for a pragmatic and scientific psychology confined to observable behavior.

  • S01E14 B.F. Skinner and Modern Behaviorism

    • The Great Courses

    A first look at one of the most influential and controversial psychologists of our time and his theory of conditioning human response.

  • S01E15 B.F. Skinner and the Engineering of Society

    • The Great Courses

    Skinner's theories as the model for completely changing child-rearing, education, behavior, and ultimately, society itself.

  • S01E16 Language

    • The Great Courses

    Skinner publishes his theory of language and the resulting critique, led by the then-unknown Noam Chomsky, points the way toward a more "cognitive" interpretation of psychology.

  • S01E17 The Integration of Experience

    • The Great Courses

    For most developed species, survival requires more than passive absorption of disconnected stimuli. An examination of how experience is organized to help creatures actually live.

  • S01E18 Perception and Attention

    • The Great Courses

    If perception weren't selective, we would drown in an unending flood of stimuli. A look at how we filter the input from the outside world down to what is important.

  • S01E19 Cognitive "Maps," "Insight," and Animal Minds

    • The Great Courses

    Is man the only animal that can think? A fascinating glimpse of both sides of the argument over anthropomorphic explanations suggest a surprising answer.

  • S01E20 Memory Revisited-Mnemonics and Context

    • The Great Courses

    A return to the subject of memory for a deeper discussion of how we process, store, and recover experience, including the problem of "eyewitness" testimony and reconstructed memories.

  • S01E21 Piaget's Stage Theory of Cognitive Development

    • The Great Courses

    A search for an explanation of how our mental powers are formed leads to the influential work of Jean Piaget and his theories of cognitive development in children.

  • S01E22 The Development of Moral Reasoning

    • The Great Courses

    Is moral development different from cognitive development as a whole? An examination of what we know about how moral reasoning evolves.

  • S01E23 Knowledge, Thinking, and Understanding

    • The Great Courses

    How we solve problems-how we actually function in our daily lives-including the essential psychological short-cut that makes the process possible.

  • S01E24 Comprehanding the World of Experience-Cognition Summarized

    • The Great Courses

    A summary of the finding that laid the foundation for the "cognitive revolution's" alternative to the empiricistic psychologies favored by the behaviorist school.

  • S01E25 Psychobiology-Nineteenth-Century Foundations

    • The Great Courses

    What is the relationship between physical and mental processes? A look at how researches have answered the question, including the strange system of phrenology and its role in the foundation of modern "brain science."

  • S01E26 Language and the Brain

    • The Great Courses

    Injuries to the brain-and resulting functional deficits-have taught us a great deal about brain function and organization, especially regarding the way language is processed.

  • S01E27 Rationality, Problem-Solving, and Brain Function

    • The Great Courses

    A continuing examination of the workings of the brain, including the organ's remarkable ability to compensate for damage early in development.

  • S01E28 The "Emotional" Brain-The Limbic System

    • The Great Courses

    Pleasure. Pain. Motivation. Rage. Fear. What we know about the fascinating part of the brain associated with these and other emotional states.

  • S01E29 Violence and the Brain

    • The Great Courses

    Is criminality really a pathology better understood in scientific than in moral terms? Is insanity truly a defense?

  • S01E30 Psychopathology-The Medical Model

    • The Great Courses

    Is all psychopathology, all "mental" illness, ultimately the consequence of a medical or biological disturbance? A look at this viewpoint and the criticisms it has faced.

  • S01E31 Artificial Intelligence and the Neurocognitive Revolution

    • The Great Courses

    Yes, computer programs can now contend with world-class chess players-to a point. But can computers be made to actually think? A beginning discussion of the pros and cons, along with the staggering ethical implications.

  • S01E32 Is Artificial Intelligence "Intelligent"?

    • The Great Courses

    Do the proponents of artificial intelligence understand what "intelligence" really is? Many say no.

  • S01E33 What Makes an Event "Social"?

    • The Great Courses

    Why a purely scientific examination of events involving people is impossible-and how researches have developed the kind of model necessary to interpret the meaning of these social events.

  • S01E34 Socialization-Darwin and the "Natural History" Method

    • The Great Courses

    How we examine a species within its own natural context, accounting for its defining features by matching these with the conditions faced by members of the species.

  • S01E35 Freud's Debt to Darwin

    • The Great Courses

    Darwin's works are among the most "well-worked-over" in Freud's restored London library. This lecture explores the influence of the world's most famous naturalist on its most famous psychiatrist.

  • S01E36 Freud, Breuer, and the Theory of Repression

    • The Great Courses

    Hysterical symptoms are unlike those produced by genuine neurological disorders. This lecture discusses the discovery of the "talking cure" and how it led to Freud and Breuer's theory of repression.

  • S01E37 Freud's Theory of Psychosexual Development

    • The Great Courses

    Freud's explanation of psychosexual development as the individual's progression from infantile stages of sexual gratification-such as thumb-sucking-to adult heterosexual activity.

  • S01E38 Critiques of Freudian Theory

    • The Great Courses

    Freud believed that psychodynamic processes are universal and largely independent of culture and society, but his biological interpretation has been rejected in favor of socially and culturally oriented theories.

  • S01E39 What Is "Personality"?

    • The Great Courses

    The question has still not been answered definitively and has furnished the grist for many since-refuted theories. This lecture examines the debate.

  • S01E40 Obedience and Conformity

    • The Great Courses

    Several classic experiments have shown the powerful influence of social context on conduct and have offered a strong challenge to both the dominant theories of personality.

  • S01E41 Altruism

    • The Great Courses

    Why do some people act heroically? Once again, social context proves critical in determining human behavior, though a highly developed self-perception can help a person rise above the common in unlikely circumstances.

  • S01E42 Prejudice and Self-Deception

    • The Great Courses

    Acts of prejudice call for a reinterpretation of context and even a reinterpretation of self to justify the action. An exploration of the darker side of human behavior.

  • S01E43 On Being Sane in Insane Places

    • The Great Courses

    What is sanity? What is insanity? As a chilling study demonstrates, the answers often depend on who is controlling the labels.

  • S01E44 Intelligence

    • The Great Courses

    The history of I.Q. and other so-called "intelligence" tests offer valuable lessons in what is and is not "predictable."

  • S01E45 Personality Traits and the Problem of Assessment

    • The Great Courses

    Is there really a test that can reveal the "underlying personality" of an individual? A look at the fundamental problem of devising such a measuring stick.

  • S01E46 Genetic Psychology and "The Bell Curve"

    • The Great Courses

    The issue of whether a given trait is rooted in genetics or the environment-long a controversial issues in the public arena-is when predicting the potential of an individual.

  • S01E47 Psychological and Biological Determinism

    • The Great Courses

    An exploration of the notion of determinism reveals it to be both counterintuitive and, in some respects, self-refuting.

  • S01E48 Civic Development-Psychology, the Person, and the Polis

    • The Great Courses

    In many ways, the fullest and most systematic theories of psychology are still those provided by Aristotle. An exploration of how rational creatures can flourish when the biological, social, and political are truly integrated.