Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Overview of teaching psychology at Lithuanian schools in the late 17th century - early 18th century
View through CrossRef
The topic of teaching scholastic psychology in Lithuania is discussed. It was not an independent discipline of philosophy and was treated as a separate tractate of physics or nature philosophy under the title “On the Soul” (“De anima”). Under the effect of the authoritarian principle, the aforementioned essay explained and commented Aristotle’s “On the Soul.” However, based on authorities of the Middle Ages on the one hand, such as Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, and Duns Scotus, and scholastic celebrities of the 16th-17th centuries on the other hand, eclecticism prevailed that tried to unite viewpoints of different authorities. Instruction on psychological teachings by the New Ages philosophy authors was forbidden, although some ideas of these authors were sometimes discussed; however, their names were not mentioned. Thus, Descartes’ understanding of a reflex was not alien to psychology taught in the old academy of Vilnius during the second half of 17th century. The main concept of scholastic psychology was the concept of the soul which, according to Aristotle, was divided into the nourishing, feeling, and thinking. In some courses we find a clear trend to explain psychic phenomena by associating them with material processes taking place in a human body. A decisive role of the brain is emphasized and an idea is raised about the localization of psychic processes in the brain. The scholastic psychology went beyond the framework of Aristotle’s work by raising and solving new problems, e.g. relationship between language and thinking. A theory on the will has been well developed. A book “Theoremata philosophica” by the Lithuanian I. Kimbaras issued in Grace in 1600 is worthy of attention. Scholastic psychology in Lithuania may not be treated as something homogenous, void of internal disparities.
Title: Overview of teaching psychology at Lithuanian schools in the late 17th century - early 18th century
Description:
The topic of teaching scholastic psychology in Lithuania is discussed.
It was not an independent discipline of philosophy and was treated as a separate tractate of physics or nature philosophy under the title “On the Soul” (“De anima”).
Under the effect of the authoritarian principle, the aforementioned essay explained and commented Aristotle’s “On the Soul.
” However, based on authorities of the Middle Ages on the one hand, such as Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, and Duns Scotus, and scholastic celebrities of the 16th-17th centuries on the other hand, eclecticism prevailed that tried to unite viewpoints of different authorities.
Instruction on psychological teachings by the New Ages philosophy authors was forbidden, although some ideas of these authors were sometimes discussed; however, their names were not mentioned.
Thus, Descartes’ understanding of a reflex was not alien to psychology taught in the old academy of Vilnius during the second half of 17th century.
The main concept of scholastic psychology was the concept of the soul which, according to Aristotle, was divided into the nourishing, feeling, and thinking.
In some courses we find a clear trend to explain psychic phenomena by associating them with material processes taking place in a human body.
A decisive role of the brain is emphasized and an idea is raised about the localization of psychic processes in the brain.
The scholastic psychology went beyond the framework of Aristotle’s work by raising and solving new problems, e.
g.
relationship between language and thinking.
A theory on the will has been well developed.
A book “Theoremata philosophica” by the Lithuanian I.
Kimbaras issued in Grace in 1600 is worthy of attention.
Scholastic psychology in Lithuania may not be treated as something homogenous, void of internal disparities.
.
Related Results
Trooping the (School) Colour
Trooping the (School) Colour
Introduction
Throughout the early and mid-twentieth century, cadet training was a feature of many secondary schools and educational establishments across Australia, with countless ...
From Sandwich to Santara: Frivolously Sserious Publications by Lithuanian Students in the US
From Sandwich to Santara: Frivolously Sserious Publications by Lithuanian Students in the US
Following World War II, Lithuanian academic youth, who found themselves and continued their studies at the US universities, joined various organizations, as a result active social,...
Dalia Gargasaitė - bibliographer and book science specialist
Dalia Gargasaitė - bibliographer and book science specialist
Dalia Gargasaitė (1938-1998) is considered to be one of the most distinguished contemporary bibliographers and book science specialists of Lithuania. Since the beginning of her cre...
Lithuanian Saturday Schools in Chicago: Student Proficiency, Generational Shift, and Community Involvement
Lithuanian Saturday Schools in Chicago: Student Proficiency, Generational Shift, and Community Involvement
This article explores the Lithuanian heritage speakers’ community in the United States. It aims to look at the correlations between generation or age of arrival in the ...
The Heraldry of the Lithuanian Tatars from the 16th to the Mid-17th Century
The Heraldry of the Lithuanian Tatars from the 16th to the Mid-17th Century
The Hospodar Tatars in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania constituted a distinct ethno-social group descended from the Golden Horde, who, due to various circumstances, joined the grand d...
The Official Lithuanian Language in the Interwar Years
The Official Lithuanian Language in the Interwar Years
The article aims to show the state of the Lithuanian language in the years of the national movement at the turn of the 20th century and its functioning in the restored independent ...
Developing Residents as Teachers: Process and Content
Developing Residents as Teachers: Process and Content
These data characterize and illuminate an analysis of experiences about teaching during each year of a pediatric residency training program in a tertiary care center. The curriculu...
Antanas Smetona as Advocate of the Native Language
Antanas Smetona as Advocate of the Native Language
Antanas Smetona (1874–1944) was one of the most active promoters of the innate self in the early 20th century. His attention to the national heritage and the native language was di...

