General Psychology Fall 2005

Monday/Wednesday 5:00- 6:15

PSY 80272 section 03; 3 credits

 

 

 

Alice Andrews

Email: andrewsa@newpaltz.edu

Office hrs: Tuesdays 4:00 - 5:30, or by appointment; Humanities B2

Website: www.newpaltz.edu/~andrewsa

E-journal: www.entelechyjournal.com

Voicemail: 257-3602

 

"Be patient toward all that is unsolved [in your heart] and try to love the questions themselves." -Rilke

"Mental health results from the fulfillment of archetypal goals."- Anthony Stevens and John Price, Evolutionary Psychiatry (2000)

"Like the T cells of the body, the healthy psyche fights off infection, rejecting false voice and false relationships." - Carol Gilligan, The Birth of Pleasure (2002)

 

Typically, the introductory statement of a General Psychology syllabus might include the topics and areas that will be covered (see calendar/schedule further down in syllabus for that). However, although the topics we will cover this semester are important, I nevertheless would like to emphasize some things that sometimes get paid lip service, but seldom are treated with any seriousness or are truly valued.

In some ways, we are all psychologists—natural born psychologists. That is, trying to figure out and understand human behavior and the human mind is, I would argue, an innate tendency. We come from a long line of ancestors who tried to figure out human behavior and the mind. Those who weren’t interested in such things, those who didn’t try to figure out human behavior and ‘other minds’ (and eventually ‘the mind’), were probably not as successful and did not survive. This is a rather speculative and crude evolutionary explanation, but clearly, knowledge-seeking, making sense of the world, having schemas, and understanding causal relationships benefited our ancestors’ survival and reproduction. This is where we come from, and this is who we are.  Being a knowledge-seeker (a philosopher, say) aids one in gaining status, power and resources (survival) which helps in gaining access to potential ‘high quality’ mates (reproduction). But also, when we engage in the pursuit of gaining any kind of knowledge (e.g., knowledge regarding whether one’s partner is having an affair, what teacher is the best in the school, which political candidate is less likely to pollute our air, what is the best, healthiest diet), it is often about one’s survival (and one’s offspring’s survival) and reproduction in the here and now.

But in another sense, knowledge-seeking is just simply pleasurable. It feels good to try to figure out causal relationships even if there is no immediate benefit in the here and now, because it is driven by an ancient program. It is because this program is related to survival and reproduction that when we engage in any epistemic pursuit, it lights up our reward centers—it simply feels good. And that’s my primary goal for the class: to activate the intrinsic knowledge-seeking tendency in you—the part of you that feels good engaged in the quest “to know”; to inspire a little epistemic passion; to further your way toward critical thinking and individuation—to get you to become evaluativists; to ignite your interest in the human mind; to instill (if not already present) a passion for writing, to facilitate opening your minds a little;  to challenge you, to provide opportunities and an environment for you to feel safe to stretch your mind and to question and re-think some of your assumptions and beliefs; to help to expand, deepen, and enrich your mind to make your synapses grow and connect.  (You can actually help toward this effort: by taking your reading seriously, by keeping an open mind in class discussions, by being engaged in your writing.) Finally, it’s my hope to turn you onto another way of seeing things— a new perspective and a new lens on life and people. The lens that I’ve been using for the past 14 years is the evolutionary one— which I’ve already touched on a bit. By the end of the semester, though, you will undoubtedly know quite a good deal about what many people are just starting to talk about: the “new science of the mind,” Evolutionary Psychology. I am not looking to turn you all into evolutionary psychologists, but I do hope that this new way of seeing things will enrich you and add to you considerably; that you will gain a better understanding of yourself and others.

Goals for myself: To be open, to learn and grow from my students, to concretize and crystallize my knowledge more, to see things in new ways, to continue to become a better teacher and learner.

 

 


Texts for the course:

1) Psychological Science: Mind, Brain, and Behavior (2003) Michael S. Gazzaniga & Todd F. Heatherton ISBN: 0-393-97587-8; $105.50 at the SUNY/NP bookstore or Amazon, etc.

 Psychological Science  

 

2) The Mating Mind: How Sexual Choice Shaped the Evolution of Human Nature

(2001) by Geoffrey Miller. New York: Anchor Books, ISBN: 038549517-X. $15 at the SUNY/NP Bookstore or Amazon, etc. 

 

3) The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2004) by Mark Haddon
           ISBN:
1400032717. $12 at the SUNY/NP bookstore or Amazon, etc.

 

Optional/Extra Credit

4) Trine Erotic. (2002) by Alice Andrews. New York: Vivisphere Publishing. ISBN: 1587761211 ($15). The book is available at: the SUNY/NP Bookstore, Ariel, Heaven and Earth, Amazon, etc. It is also both on reserve and in the collection of the Sojourner Truth library.

 

 

 


 

 Your Final Grade is determined by the following:

 

  • Bb (Blackboard) Posts: 38 points total

 

Portfolio with up to 14 posts (including your 2 best) due on the last day of class: December 12. 

14 posts; 1 point each – 14 points

 

In addition, 2 of your best posts will be graded. The first “best of what you’ve got” is due on October 24. The second is due on the last day of class, December 12.

Each is worth 12 points – for a total of 24 points.

 

 

  • In-class ‘short essays or short answer’ – 12  points

(3 in-class ‘essays’ each worth 4 points.)

These will be very short, unannounced, and will occur at the beginning of the class. They will absolutely not require any rote memorizing on your part. If you have been doing the reading and coming to class you should be able to do well.

 

 

  • Paper – 30 points

3-page paper on A Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon. (Due October 26.)

I hope we will participate in some of the events during One Book, One New Paltz the week of Oct 31-Nov 7. Here’s the website for OB/ONP:

http://www.newpaltz.edu/onebook/Eventsonebook.html

 

 

  • Take-home Final (Easy)  – 20 points

Due in class (not by e-mail) December 19.  Late finals will not be accepted.

 

 

  • Extra-credit – 7 points (Up to 7 points.)

2-page paper on Trine Erotic (my novel which deals with Evolutionary Psychology and other behavioral science themes.) (Due November 30.)

 

 

 

Communication with me:

 

Please, please, check your New Paltz-email often! Your New Paltz-email account is the one I will use to communicate with the class as a whole. My email address is: andrewsa@newpaltz.edu. My office hours are Tuesdays 4:00-5:30; if this time conflicts with your schedule, I’m happy to coordinate another time to  meet with you – just see  me after class or email me about it. 

 

 

Missing classes:

 

Although I don’t exactly penalize for absences, missing class could affect your grade: assignments are sometimes given out and changes are made in the schedule/syllabus; there are   three, short in-class ‘essays’; lectures/class discussion will be valuable for your Bb posts (more on that later), your in-class ‘essays/short answers’, your paper, and final, etc.

 

 

Being late to class:

Please make every effort to be on time. The unannounced ‘short essay’/’short answer’ will begin at the beginning of the class, and if you’re late, you will have less (or even no) time to take it. This encourages (and rewards) punctuality.

 

Cell phones:

Please turn your cell to silence mode. If you’re a caregiver and you need to be in touch with a child or parent, etc., please turn to vibrate mode and answer phone outside of class.

 

 

Academic Integrity:

From the SUNY New Paltz statement on academic integrity: “Students are expected to maintain the highest standards of honesty in their college work. Cheating, forgery, and plagiarism are serious offenses, and students found guilty of any form of academic dishonesty are subject to disciplinary action.”

For more information regarding the policy of academic integrity here at the college, you can go to: http://www.newpaltz.edu/studentaffairs/regulations/campus_rules.html#academic.

Also, please see me if you are unsure as to what violates this policy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Bb (Blackboard) Posts: 28 points

 

14 posts; 1 point each – 14 points

Posts will be based on your reactions to the readings: Psychological Science; The Mating Mind; or whatever else has been assigned. Print out your best post of the week and include it in your portfolio. (You need only comment on one of the readings if there are more than one. And it can be specific or broad; it’s up to you.)

 

In addition, 2 of your best posts will be graded. At least 1 of the 2 should be on TMM. The first “best of what you’ve got” is due on October 24. The second is due on the last day of class (December 12) and should be placed atop all of the other posts, with some indication you wish it to be graded— perhaps with a star, check-mark, “please grade,” etc.). Each is worth 7 points – for a total of 14 points.

Late “best-of-what you’ve-got” posts due October 24 will lose 4 points off for every day late. (Two points off if handed in after class (the eve of the 24th.)

 

Portfolio with up to 14 posts (including your 2 best) due on the last day of class: December 12.

Absolutely no late portfolios accepted.

 

 

For the portfolio:

 

Staple posts together (with a cover page), remembering to put the post you want graded on the top. Please number your posts—there are a maximum of 14 posts.

 

Cover page:

Your name

Your email

Your phone #

 

 

The purpose of the Bb posts are many; here are some:

 

  1. I want to provide you with a place where you can communicate and share ideas, especially nuanced ideas that we may not get a chance to cover in class; where you can grow as a thinker and participate in an epistemic arena.

 

  1. Communicating your ideas with others in the class is a nice way to extend the classroom experience and your private reading experience—it’s also a different way of doing it than talking in class or writing a more formal essay.

 

  1. To give me another way to assess you. (It’s worth about 1/3 of your grade).

 

I’m not looking for you to become an expert on the theories and language of Geoffrey Miller. I’ve chosen The Mating Mind as an auxiliary reading because it’s beautifully written in a fun, sexy, accessible way and because the theories are fascinating, possibly life-perspective-altering, and provide a great backdrop to our general study of psychology. The Subtitle of TMM is “How Sexual Choice Shaped the Evolution of Human Nature.” TMM is Miller’s synthesis: it’s his answer to everything you wanted to know about the human mind and behavior (and more!)—i.e., Psychology. He’s an evolutionary psychologist and his answer is from an evolutionary perspective. I would recommend you not getting too bogged down in theory, but just experience it in a relaxed way. I want you to get the gist of Miller’s theories—but you don’t need to “know” or memorize any of it—just take in whatever you take in. Some of it is difficult, but much of it is very accessible and fun to read. To wit:

 “From a sexual selection viewpoint, clitorises should respond only to men who demonstrate high fitness, including the physical fitness necessary for long, energetic sex, and the mental fitness necessary to understand what women want and how to deliver it. The choosy clitoris should produce orgasm only when the woman feels genuinely attracted to a man's body, mind, and personality, and when the man proves his attentiveness and fitness through the right stimulation.” (p. 239)

 

 

 

What should you post?

 

I’d like you to take a look at a dialogue I had some years back with a woman on a “big” list I belong to (EP/Yahoo!). The list is “big” because it has about 4,000 members and it is populated by pretty much all of the big names in Evolutionary Psychology—which is unusual for a Yahoo! Group, apparently.

 

If you go to my e-journal, Entelechywww.entelechyjournal.com (there’s a link to it on Bb), and go to Editor’s Musings, you will find it; it’s called: Meta Study: Reactions to a Study on Female Sexuality. (If you’re reading this online, you should be able to click on in it and go directly to the piece.)

Also on the Editor’s Musing page is a “dialogue” I had with colleague Jeff Miller. (He teaches political science and is the head of the Honor’s Program here at SUNY/NP.) This also will give you an idea of what I’m looking for, as well as show how a simple dialogue or email exchange can be valuable—for the people engaging in it as well as others. (I continue to get emails about both of those ‘pieces’ and the pages have even been linked to from other sites.)

Here’s the piece: Meta Review: Reactions to a Review of  The Blank Slate

 

What a decent post on TMM might look like:

Subject: Courtship in Pleistocene: Poor, poor Freud

On page 217, Miller makes an important evolutionary, anti-Freudian point that makes plenty of sense. He basically argues that it’s possible that children evolved fitness indicators to extract care and attention and investment from their parents, not because children want to mate with their parents (a la Oedipus).  I agree—however, what about psychological love-maps and templates (see J. Money)? The idea that young children ‘fall in love’ with their (usually opposite-sex) parents (which is different than wanting to have sex with them, I think) is not unheard of, and in fact, the phenomenon is quite common. (My daughter used to tell me often that she wanted to marry her daddy.) We learn a great deal about the world and environment and about what to value, etc. from our parents. They are, of course, our models for life. Mommy chose daddy, and I am like mommy, therefore I should choose daddy—and later I will choose someone like daddy. Though, yes, children do direct their fitness indicators at their parents: “energetic play, humorous storytelling, flirtatious conversation” to (in part) elicit parental support, no question, they also engage in it, I think, because they are rehearsing with their “first love” and learning what to like and what not to like. Eventually they will have to choose a mate and even the child’s use of fitness indicators with his/her parent will come up again. For example: How did the mother react to her son’s storytelling? Was she distant and cold— or warm and responsive? This dynamic surely sets up a template for later choosing.

 

How I will grade your 2 best posts?

 

You may wish to turn in your primary post or a subsequent post that was a response to someone else’s post—it’s up to you…whichever you think is better. (You might want to print the other person’s comment to provide context; again that’s your call.)

 

 

Each graded post is worth 7 points.

You will receive more points if your posts are:

Original, creative, passionate, synthetic, show a demonstration of your knowledge of psychology, EP, and the points you’re talking about, and connect ideas we’ve been talking and reading about. In terms of TMM, if you do ALL of this AND demonstrate a real understanding of Miller’s theories, you will no doubt get a 7.

 

 

When should you post?

 

You should try to post during the week as you’re reading or when you’re done, depending. Please post on but preferably before Friday. Again, you need only post a response to one of the readings for the week. Even if you post as late as Friday eve, that will still give you the whole weekend to respond to someone if they responded to your post, or to respond to some other post, etc.

 

How to get to Bb:

 

Go to SUNY/NP’s main page: www.newpaltz.edu

Go to the section “On campus” and click on Blackboard. On Bb page, enter your username and password and then find this class—General Psychology

 


 

N.B.

All “further” readings/assignments are optional.

This schedule is subject to change.

ERes password: “genpsy

 

Monday

August 29

1st day of classes

intro

Wednesday

August 31

Intro/  RD. PS CH. 1

(Further: “Being Brave” – Entelechy)

 

Monday September 5

 

No class : LABOR DAY

Wednesday

September 7

Psych intro/

RD. “The Evolution of Despair” and

“Human Nature: Born or Bred” on ERes;  PS 62-68

 

Monday

September 12

EP/

RD. “Evolutionary Perspectives on Personality” on ERes

Wednesday

September 14

EP/RD. TMM 351-386

 (Further: PINKER v.SPELKE

http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/debate05/debate05_index.html)

Monday

September 19

The Science of the Sexes /RD. TMM 1-8; 99-119

Wednesday

September 21

Mating Mind/RD. PS 69-93

Monday

September 26

BRAIN (Prof. Giordana Grossi, guest lecturer)/

RD. PS CH.4

(Further: “Balance Your Brain Hemispheres” on

my webpage, under General Psychology)

 

Wednesday

September 28

BRAIN/RD. PS P.390-395; 475-482


 

Monday

October 3

No class: ROSH HASHANA

Wednesday

October 5

 

 

ATTACHMENT/LOVE

 

Monday

October 10

LOVE

RD. (to be announced)

 

Wednesday

October 12

LOVE/

Read TMM 146-152

 

Monday

October 17

HADDON

RD PS CH. 10 

 

Wednesday

October 19

Mid-Point EMOTIONS/

Trine Erotic

RD “Evolutionary Explanations of Emotions” on ERes

Monday

October 24

 

 

Post #1 due

EMOTIONS

RD PS 362-33; 549-552

**(This is on autism, so you might want to read

it sooner for your paper!)

 

Wednesday

October 26

AUTISM

Paper due.

RD. PS 401-406

Monday

October 31

 

MORAL SENSE

RD. TMM 292-312; 321-340

(*further: “Sexual Selection for Moral Virtues” on Bb.)

 

Wednesday

November 2

Good Breeding

RD. CH. 15

 

Monday

November 7

RD. CH. 15/

PERSONALITY/

Black Solidarity Day

Wednesday

November 9

PERSONALITY/

Monday

November 14

PERSONALITY/

Wednesday

November 16

PERSONALITY/

RD CH. 16

Monday

November 21

DISORDERS

Wednesday

November 23

 

 

No class: THANKSGIVING

Monday

November 28

DISORDERS

Wednesday

November 30

DISORDERS/ RD CH. 17

Monday

December 5

TREATMENT

Wednesday

December 7

TREATMENT

Monday

December 12

Last day. Wrap up. Portfolio due.

Monday

December 19

Final due: 5:30

 

 


Some books which have informed me along the way:

Ways of Seeing; John Berger

Women in Love, D.H. Lawrence

Two Essays on Analytical Psychology, C.G. Jung

The Will to Live; Arthur Schopenhauer

The Will to Power; Friedrich Nietzsche

The Birth of Tragedy; Friedrich Nietzsche

Studies on Hysteria; Josef Breuer/Sigmund Freud

The Language of the Body; Alexander Lowen

The Dragons of Eden; Carl Sagan

The Holographic Paradigm; Ken Wilbur

The Meme Machine; Susan Blackmore

The Ecstasy of Communication; Jean Baudrillard

The Pleasure of the Text; Roland Barthes

On Human Nature; E.O. Wilson
Women’s Way of Knowing;
Mary Field Belenky, et al.

Plain and Simple; Sue Bender

Much Ado About Nothing; William Shakespeare

Sexual Personae: Art & Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson; Camille Paglia

Vamps & Tramps: New Essays; Camille Paglia

Sex, Art, and American Culture: Essays; Camille Paglia

The Descent of Woman; Elaine Morgan

A Natural History of the Senses; Diane Ackerman
A Natural History of Love;
Diane Ackerman

Woman; Natalie Angier

Beauty of the Beastly; Natalie Angier

Sexing the Cherry; Jeanette Winterson

Sexing the Body, Anne Fausto-Sterling

The New Science of Intimate Relationships; Garth Fletcher

Woman’s Inhumanity to Woman; Phyliss Chesler

Anatomy of Love; Helen Fisher

Why We Love; Helen Fisher

A General Theory of Love; Thomas Lewis, Fari Amini, and  Richard Lannon

The Blank Slate; Steven Pinker

The Selfish Gene; Richard Dawkins

Evolutionary Psychiatry; Anthony Stevens and John Price
The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and the Generation of Culture; Jerome H. Barkow (Ed.)

Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind; David M. Buss

The Evolution of Desire: Strategies of Human Mating; David M. Buss

The Evolution of Allure; George L. Hersey

The Mating Mind: How Sexual Choice Shaped the Evolution of Human Nature; Geoffrey Miller

Digit Ratio: A Pointer to Fertility, Behavior and Health; John T. Manning
Sex and Cognition; Doreen Kimura
Against Love: A Polemic; Laura Kipnis 

 

 

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time Paper

 

Due: Wednesday, October 26th

Times-New Roman, 12-point. Double-space.

Exactly 3 pages.

 

Write a paper in the style of Christopher Boone.

 

What would it be like to live without your social-attribution abilities—without a theory of mind (TOM)? Read “Curious Incident” to get a good idea…

Now, imagine you’re Christopher Boone (something, perhaps, Christopher Boone is unable to do!—one needs a good TOM to do this), and you have just finished writing your book “Curious Incident.” Siobhan has asked you to write a paper on autism…She says to you (Christopher):

 

“I think it would be very interesting if you could do some research on autism. Why don’t you do that and write a paper on some of the various theories. You could look at the biological/genetic, environmental, and/or social constructionist models…Here are some links, also, to get you started.

 

Did you know that Simon Baron-Cohen’s brother is a famous actor? He’s Sacha Baron Cohen—who plays a hip-hop journalist on Da Ali G Show.  www.hbo.com/alig/

 

 

Here are some links on Autism that you might want to check out:

Simon Baron-Cohen links:

 

Article about Baron-Cohen:

http://cms.psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-20040107-000005.html

 

 

Article by Baron-Cohen:

http://jnnp.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/75/7/945

 

 

 

Baron-Cohen’s research center, with tests for autistic spectrum disorders, such as: “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” test:

http://www.autismresearchcentre.com/arc/default.asp

 

 

Tons of autism links:

 

http://www.futurehorizons-autism.com/links.asp

 

 

Things I’ll be looking for in assessing you paper:

 

 

Did you get Boone’s style/voice right?

Did you incorporate aspects of his life so I’m convinced it’s Christopher and that you read the book?

Is the information you present accurate? Is it convincing?

Is it well-written? (including sense, organization, grammar, spelling, etc.)