Everything about William Mcdougall Psychologist totally explained
William McDougall (
June 22,
1871 in
Chadderton,
Lancashire,
England -
November 28,
1938 Durham,
U.S.) was an early
twentieth century psychologist who spent the first part of his career in the
UK and the latter part in the
United States. He wrote a number of highly influential textbooks, and was particularly important in the development of the theory of
instinct and of
social psychology in the English-speaking world. He was an opponent of
behaviourism and stands somewhat outside the mainstream of the development of Anglo-American psychological thought in the first half of the twentieth century; but his work was very well known and respected among lay people.
McDougall studied medicine and physiology at the
University of Cambridge and in
London, and
Göttingen. After teaching at
University College London and
Oxford, he was recruited by
William James to
Harvard University, where he served as a professor of psychology from 1920 to 1927. He then moved to
Duke University where he remained until his death. He was a Fellow of the
Royal Society. Among his students was
Cyril Burt.
McDougall's interests and sympathies were broad. He was interested in
eugenics, but departed from
Darwinian orthodoxy in maintaining the possibility of the inheritance of acquired characteristics, as suggested by
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck; he carried out many experiments designed to demonstrate this process. Opposing behaviourism, he argued that behaviour was generally goal-oriented and purposive, an approach he called
hormic psychology; however, in the theory of
motivation, he defended the idea that individuals are motivated by a significant number of inherited instincts, whose action they may not consciously understand, so they might not always understand their own goals. His ideas on instinct strongly influenced
Konrad Lorenz, though Lorenz didn't always acknowledge this. McDougall underwent
psychoanalysis with
C. G. Jung, and was also prepared to study
parapsychology; in 1920 he served as president of the
Society for Psychical Research, and in the subsequent year of its US counterpart, the
American Society for Psychical Research.
Because of his interest in eugenics and his unorthodox stance on
evolution, McDougall has been adopted as an iconic figure by proponents of a strong influence of inherited traits on behaviour, some of whom are regarded by most mainstream psychologists as
scientific racists. While McDougall was certainly an unorthodox figure and always willing to take a minority view, there's no reason to suppose that in the light of modern psychological knowledge and political developments, he'd have supported the position taken by these groups. Though he wrote: "...; the few distinguished Negroes, so called, of America - such as Douglass, Booker Washington, Du Bois - have been, I believe, in all cases mulattoes or had some proportion of white blood. We may fairly ascribe the incapacity of the Negro race to form a nation to the lack of men endowed with the qualities of great leaders, even more than to the lower level of average capacity" (McDougall, William., The Group Mind, p.187, Arno Press, 1973; Copyright, 1920 by G.P. Putnam's Sons).
McDougall married at the age of 29 ("against my considered principles", he reports in his autobiographical essay, "for I held that a man whose chosen business in life was to develop to the utmost his intellectual powers shouldn't marry before forty, if at all"). He had five children.
'....I am one of those who can't find reason to believe in the existence of panaceas, elixirs of life, and philosopher's stones, one of those who believe rather that the price of liberty and human dignity is unceasing vigilance and perpetual struggle with the infirmities of our own nature. ....surely, if we'd form some useful notion of what human beings may and should become under intensive cultivation, and, still more, if we'd know how to conduct the process of cultivation so as to make some progress toward that ideal, we must start with some notion of the raw material provided by Nature for us to work upon! ....If I've a religion, its first precept is that we'll seek truth faithfully; and I'd say this with Emerson: "God offers to every mind its choice between truth and repose. Take which you please. You can never have both."'
William McDougall, 1927, Character and the Conduct of Life. London : Methuen.
Selected bibliography
- An Introduction to Social Psychology (1908–50, reprinted 1973)
- The Group Mind (1920, reprinted 1973)
- Physiological Psychology (1920).
- Outline of Psychology (1923)
- Body and Mind
- Outline of Abnormal Psychology
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