What is psychology? To begin, psychology is the scientific study of the human mind and its processes, including behavior. To be more explicit psychology is a complex, diverse, and in-depth disciplinary that has grown dramatically in its area of interests since its founding. What I particularly appreciate most about this discipline is the comprehensive list of subfields within its branch of division. Psychology is profession, academic study, and applied science that evolved from philosophy, the natural and social sciences, medicine, theology, physics, physiology as well as the liberal arts and humanities. Although, traditionally known as the study …show more content…
Also, such knowledge can be used as a source of valuable information and applied in contemporary psychology, theories, studies, research, experiments, concepts, and methodologies. Moreover it serves as a reference for future scholars, psychologists, researchers, and scientists by helping them avoid the repetition of ineffective errors and practices. The roots of psychology can be traced from ancient Greece, and early philosophers. Early psychology essentially focused on measuring and understanding the mind. I believe the ideas of presentism, historicism, dualism, monism, nativism, empiricism, mechanism, vitalism, rationalism, irrationalism, universalism, and relativism and the approaches to writing history such as, the Zeitgeist approach, great-person approach, and historical development approach are among the most profound concepts contributing to the rise of psychology. I believe the historical development, or naturalistic approach best describe the evolution process of early psychology. This approach emphasizes how various individuals or events taking place contribute to the changes of ideas or concepts through the years. Which makes sense because the byproduct of evolution is transformation, as humanity