WK7Assgn Welling T
October
12, 2019
Dr. Melody
Moore
Course Syllabus
introduction
Classroom management rules and expectations regarding student
participation
Course description
This course is intro to General Psychology, unlike almost every
other course in general psychology you will learn information and details which
are offered in literally no other school or class. The information in this
class is both far more detailed, and far more intense. The amount of reading is
at least double other classes, but the pay off is you will have a far higher
level of understanding the field of Psychology than any other program else in
the field.
This course and the following classes are designed to be a very
deep dive into the foundations of Psychology.
Course introduction that includes a rationale for the course
The rationality for this course is to perform a deep acadmicaly and scholiast dive into the foundations and formulations
of the concepts of Psycnlgy itself. In the years since
this researcher has been uncovering facts and evidnece regarding Wundt and what
he was able to achieve, the facts that it has been assumed he was in effect by himself
toiling away in a liblrary in Prussia just allowing
his natural genius to work. Nothing could be farther form
the truth. First he was not in Prussia, second he was not by himself, third he
was in a very carefully constructed library, fourth he was also a slave
(indentured servant) owned by the Prussian Empire, fifth he had helpers who in
some circles are profoundly more famous than he ever will be (those helpers are
the reason both the Prussians and the Americans flat rejected anyone to actually
tell the truth about the foundations of Psychology. The Prussians created the FreiKorp
which is a paramilitary organization {terrorist cell} designed to go in behind
enemy lines to sow discontent, hoping to
crush entirely the enmy culture, so the army only has
to come in to mop up, the Munich Terror Cell of the FreiKorp name changed in
1920 to NAZI, the New York FreiKorp Terror cell name changed to Tammany Hall [post
1980 they name changed to something else, but are still very alive and well
promoting Prussian terrorist ideas and of course violence][George Clinton the
Mayor of New York and the president of Tammany Hall in 1790 ordered Arron Burr
the CEO to assassinate Alexander Hamilton{shocker politicians lie}although publically the official story is entirely different from
what actually happened. George Clinton wanted to be President but Thomas Jefferson
was profoundly too popular, so he set his sights on the VP slot, but Alexander
Hamilton was actually more popular in some ways to Jefferson, so it was likely
to have Hamilon as VP under Jefferson, than move into
the Presidential roll instead of James Madison, who could be President after
Hamilton. Which would eliminate entirely James Monroe from being President
installing John Quoincy Adams in place of Monroe.
Which would allow Quincy to have 8 full years then be replaced by Andrew Jackson. That entire sequence was interrupted when George Clinton secretly
ordered Arron Burr to assassinate Hamilton. Talk about a depth of information for
the field of Psychology to research.] The connections between the American
founding fathers and the Prussian Empire freikopr is irrefutable. Thomas Jefferson once
commented “he’d rather go to one of David Rittenhouse’s meetings than spend a
whole week in Paris.” The ramifications in context
cannot be understated. Jefferson not only loved Paris, but he would have lived his
life in Paris if he had that choice. Which he did not. This Rittenhouse, Paris,
Freikopr founding fathers of America, etc. is the
same exact equation dynamic reflected in the events of a half century later in Tiffin
Ohio.), five most of the first half century of the foundation of Psychology is all
political theater which has little actual foundation in facts, six the tools Wundt
would were within the structure of the stories of the Trojan War, etc. This
course covers these details and equations, which little to not any of this information
is available in any other course offered in the entire field of Psychology.
In addition, Psychology is a form of Medicine, you cannot find a
medical doctor who is not interested in taking a complete history of their patents.
A complete and thorough history is exactly what the field of Psychology itself
is missing.
List of prerequisites, if applicable
If you can handle the class load, come on it.
Textbook* and readings (peer-reviewed journal articles, reputable
websites, books); be sure to provide full references for all textbooks and
readings
Titles for each Week of the course that reflect the topic(s)
covered that Week
Week 1
Heidelberg University, Wundt, translates the classics into
modern psychology.
Week 2
Pavlov and Skinner standby tools, CR and OC
Week 3
Janus the Greeks and Romans
Week 4
The Trojan War, the Classics, the ATEN of Egypt
Week 5
Pyrmaids, Janus, Freud
Week 6
Scientific Method
Week 7
Guild Structure
Week 8
Skinner Box, Shrodinger’s Cat
Week 9
Trojan War as it applies to European Civilizations
Week 10
The Old Kingdom of Egypt and the science of the Mind
Week 11
Foundation of the British Culture from the city of Samhain aka
Rome
Week 12
Open Discussion Think Tank
At least one discussion question DQ each Week
Proven beyond measure fact in Medicine (which psychology is an
arm of Medicine) when every single patent goes to see a doctor
or a medical professional interacts (profesinaly)
with a patient. Two things happen by default. First thing which happens, what
is the medical issue today, second question what is the shtiroy
of the patient. The history of the patient is actually more
imporntat than what is the current symptom seeking
treatment. Any discussion which involves not having these two questions asked every
time makes the answers irrelevant. Each of the DQ posts are double. First question
is; describe the information presented. Second question; how is this relative in
the larger picture of history. Schridinger proved his
beyond any doubt in his study about a creature in the box is both alive and
dead at the same time. The answer x is important but
the context y is more important. Y is the determinator for two states of existence
to apply simultaneously.
Week 1
question 1 1 Where was Wundt when he reformed modern psychology.
2 Where did Wundt find the sources he reassembled into modern psychology. 3
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 2
question 1 A couple sentence description of CR, a couple
sentences description of OC. More if you want. The foundation tools of the
human psyche, however they work different nurture versus nature. Philosophy
concept CR and OC as compared with Janus.
question 2 what is the historical context.
exactly where did this tool came from,
Week 3
question 1 define Janus as it directly relates to the field of psychology.
It directly relates in more than a couple ways; chose at least two and provide
descriptions. Compare Janus with the incorrect translations of this concept
from Freud.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 4
question 1 The origins of Janus the Pyramids and the applications
of the differences between comfortable fictions versus uncomfortable facts.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 5
question 1 Janus and Genius as it directly associates with
collectivism and group think concepts. Define how Janus becomes Genius,
describe how Genius is defined, and how the artist/poet/vessel/person is defined
by society as either the east face (good) or the west face (bad) of Janus.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 6
question 1 Scientific Method; fully define and describe the scientific
method.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from. Where did the scientific method
come from.
Week 7
question 1 before Wundt could come to Tiffin Ohio, what was the name
of the city repvious to 1830. How long does it take
to create the legal framework to obtain a charter to teach.
where did Heidelberg Tiffin Ohio come from. Where did the books which reformed Edingurg U come from. Trace the
origins back as far as you can go.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 8
question 1 what is the guild structure
and why did the Vatican allow it.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 9
question 1 Schrodinger’s cat, define and describe the cat experiment
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 10
question 1 Versailles and the brothers Grimm; define both in
context to each other. Who build Versailles, it was named after, combine the definition
of Versailles and the key names.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 11
question 1 overall what did you learn this
class. What stuck out in your mind.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
Week 12
question 1 open discussion, anyone have questions.
question 2 what the historical context is. exactly where did
this tool came from,
File Descriptions
Week 1
Wundt and the Ogle family of Tiffin Ohio
This class is not going to start out the way 99% of other general
psychology classes starts out. Almost the entire field of Psychology has no
idea the following subjects exist let alone are the foundation from where Wundt
gathered the tools from which to write the textbook.
Wilhelm Wundt
William James
Mary Calkin
Ogle
Week 2
CR
OC
Janus
Trojan War
Socrates
Hello class, the concept of Janus the schema of Rome and why both the entire Roman Empire and Psychology as well as a significant amount of western academics revolves around the concept of Janus.
Want to know what in the world I am talking about. The word the Romans used almost no possible way the language origin is Latin, since Janus existed centuries before the invention of Latin. The Romans concept of schema was Janus, which has an insanely long, detailed, and complex history which ironically has its origins in Judaism despite the facts that the cultures which use Janus the most are as anti-Semitic as it got a few centuries ago.
Western cultures have been Conditioned response and Operative Conditioned to respond to specific ideas, concepts, and group think models which over the millennia have become twisted into whatever the new leaders want it to mean. but, the most basic tools of psychology themselves are all but literally found in the schema of Janus.
Pavlov rang a bell before feeding his dogs, months of this every day action produced the dogs would salivate at the sound of a bell, the Pavlovian or Conditioned Response (CR).
Operative Conditioning (OC); to induce various types of pain and or torture in order to illicit a specific response
janus Samhain, pumpkin faces, the headless horsemen.
Week 3
Greeks
The Roman Empire
Janus
Plato learned about the functions and structures of the Janus concept from Socrates; who very likely based on the propaganda evidence released from both the Athenians (which is on the genocidally extreme side of ironic) and the up and coming Roman Empire.
The Roman Empire at that time was not a military threat to the Greeks, yet. But the writing was clearly on the wall. The Greek City state models were not going to be able to maintain and function as a cohesive unit when the Roman Army came a calling in a couple centuries.
The largest problem, the Greeks loved to fight so much they lost dozens if not 100s of people (infantry) every year sometimes more in city on city fighting. They simply could not put away the blood lust to work together long enough to create a sufficiently large army. This was not a problem for the Roman Empire. The Romans fought together, rarely against each other. A splintered group of armies, versus a unified army who took the best parts of the Spartan phalanx concept, improved it to make the Roman square, leaving the parts that did not work after several centuries left behind.
Week 4
Classics
Greece to Rome
Athens
Athens to ATEN
The ATEN of Egypt, a Synapse
This is all Psychology, since this is when and where the classics which is how the Classics traveled from Greece to Rome, through those conflicts. As the Romans absorbed the classics as their own, they learned from the foundations and fundamental tools of psychology hidden in the Classics.
Ironically because the Capital of Greece is the city of Athens, which is after backtracking through 100 language translations from 1330-present take the H off after the T, and the ‘s off since it is not needed to indicate a proper name in Indo European Language. You have the name ATEN, which is the first deity of Egypt. Which is an extremely long, detailed, and complicated aspect of Egyptian culture, and Pyramids, and the city of Rome itself.
Week 5
The Pyramids
Back Bone, Spinal Cord, Synapse
Janus
Plato thought Processing
Conditioned Response; CR
Operative Conditioning OC
The Pyramids are ,in essence, the backbone, the causeways are the major nerves coming off the spine. It is also the construction of a Synapse in the brain, part of a neuropathway.
The evidence is beyond easy to look at and reassemble, however the evidence has been hidden behind the Greeks and Romans using the tools from the classics of Conditioned response and Operative Conditioning in order to hide those most basic and fundamental aspects of western culture.
Week 6
Scientific Method
Idea
Hypothesis
Test
Theory
Conclusion
Explain the Scientific Method
The ways in which those two cultures used OC to bury these facts, is by employing the not yet called said Scientific Method to argue students who strayed too close to the facts and evidence that the ATEN, the Pyramids, the Jews (who built the pyramids), eventually called the city of Rome after a 500 year war which occurred immediately after the Trojan War (where the Classics were in part created from), the concept of the schema/deity Janus, etc. by 100s if not 1000s of other surrounding topics. To keep students for the last 2500 years from asking questions about these sequences of information, that any first-year medical student or a person trained in the discipline of gross anatomy, looking at the pyramids draw a line from the very center of each pyramid. Those connected dot lines form a perfect double spine.
Week 7
The Ogle family and the great library
he was born about 10 years before the city was officially
renamed to Tiffin after Edmund Tiffin the politician. Those book
were profoundly too advanced to be from some printer.
Week 8
Guild Structure
Heresy,
“Stay on Topic”
To hide this unbelievably obvious evidence, generation upon generation of students were not allowed to cross discipline. Thanks to the OC of the guild structure. Students were severely punished if they went outside their chosen “stay on topic, of this class, this degree process, this subject matter”. Deviations from said subject matter were on the extreme side of harshly disciplined. From the Vatican murdering the student for heresy, up to and through being kicked out of the school; depending on what the Vatican and then the rules of western academics was allowed to
Week 9
Skinner Box of “in a classroom
Schrodinger's Cat
The Skinner Box of “in a classroom” depending on the teachers and the administration extremely harsh punishments existed up until just a few decades ago. Do x and you are punished; define a Skinner Box. which is the absolute best way to suppress anyone questioning the authority of the subjects presented. To this day some ideas are still on the extreme side of suppressed, publishing.
All students are rewarded CRs with good grades and support from the teachers, administration, and the academic world for staying on topic and keeping within the acceptable boundaries of what has been approved. Rewarded with treats, ringing a bell e.g. receiving an A grade for work done within the boundaries of the stated rules. Stray outside those rules and you are punished with Fs and eventually removed from school, Skinner Box.
Schrodinger’s cat and Janus; east face the analytical part of the
mind is facing the earth, west face the imagination part of the mind is facing the
earth.
Week 10
Trojan War
Versailles; Adam, Enoch, Noah, Narmer, Jacob, Caesar, Louis, Tier
Brothers Grimm
European Kingdoms
Holy Roman Empire
Witch Burning times
Schrödinger’s Cat
Now that you understand how to use the tools of CR and OC, the question remains why in the world use them to such extremes to hide information about the Trojan War, and all its close to infinite applications. That answer is of course, the Trojan War is what allowed for the formation of the Roman Empire, which allowed the formulation of the Holy Roman Empire, which allowed the formulation of the Kingdom of France, which in a way allowed for the formation of the Kingdom of England. Although the English and the British are two radically different cultures, despite the facts that the genocide level OC’s applied by the English to absorb the British and use the name British does not actually make the English British, it only means the English have been on the extreme side of great at forcing the world to believe they are British and killing anyone (Skinner Box, and for that matter Schrödinger’s Cat) who questions the authority of the English calling themselves British.
The British are the direct descendants of the Trojans and the 18th dynasty who themselves are the direct descendants of the Old Kingdom of Egypt, who built the pyramids and formulated the Pyramids to be the Siamese twins of the double spine of Janus.
Extremely complex, but when boiled down, extremely simple. The descendants of the Hyksos used every manipulation tool they could get their hands on in order to erase the facts which the Old Kingdom built and understood, which obviously the Hyksos felt threatened by.
Why does this matter.
Week 11
The British are the direct descendants of the Trojans and the 18th dynasty who themselves are the direct descendants of the Old Kingdom of Egypt, who built the pyramids and formulated the Pryamids to be the Siamese twins of the double spine of Janus.
Extremely complex, but when boiled down, extremely simple. The descendants of the Hyksos used every manipulation tool they could get their hands on in order to erase the facts which the Old Kingdom built and understood, which obviously the Hyksos felt threatened by.
why does this matter.
Everyone raise your hands.
Everyone hands up.
When the questions no longer apply to you, put your hand down. But not until then.
First question
“How many present want to be in this class?”.
“How many in this class have been affected by a CR and or an OC.?”
A few might put their hands down.
If everyone in the class does not drop their hands, continue without this
Those that do.
Everyone keep your hands up. but I have specific questions for those students to realize they have actually been conditioned to respond in specific ways.
“Do you understand the words coming out of my mouth. Congratulations, you have been trained to respond in given ways to a given stimulation, You have been conditioned to respond in a specific way. So put your hands back up.”
next question
“How many understand that the history of western education is profoundly different than you were both told and were through not a small degree of torture led to believe”
next question
“what do you need to do, according to your own path and wyas you learn how to begin to extinct these behavior patterns. Keep your hands up”
“will you stay with the accepted dominant paradigm information, or will you strive
Week 12
class open discussions describe how think tanks work. Allow open
discussion of anything covered in the class. Be open to having this discussion bleed
into a different more open discussion in either a hall, restaurant, someplace open,
etc.
At least six assignments over the course of the 12 Weeks
word length
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
Week 11
Week 12
paper descriptions
Week 1
Wundt and Oliver interact together, with a very likely in a
state of slavery Joseph Smith
Week 2
write an in-depth description of CR and OC.
Week 3
Janus in direct comparison with Freud and the balance between the
individual and the society/culture itself. a brief description of where janus is found in archaeology in both Egypt and rome, a brief description for janus
and the mezuzah. How freud took a perfectly great
idea which had been around for several millennia and translated it wrong. Why
might freud have translated the concept of Janus
incorrectly.
Week 4
The Egyptian Pryamids and Janus, the Egyptian Pyramids and the geocentrically
accepted idea that the phryaids were graves. Describe
the discovery of the biology of Janus in the Pyrmids.
Describe the connect the dots. Describe the invasion of Egypt by the Hykss, where did the old kingdom evacuate too, where did
Janus schema arrive in the Latin language.
Week 5
Janus and Genius,
describe the functions and structures of the Janus freud
connection from a perspective not chosen in week 3. Chose at least 3 aspects of
Janus which have a direct impact with modern psychology. You might want to
include the Holy Roman Empire library and Freud gaining access to it, you might
also want to include hwo Wundt learned about it.
Week 6
The ways the scientific method is used incorrectly. The differences
between the method being used for the good to dig into how to find good solid
information and jhow it use it wrong to use
sociopathic techniques to burry ideas a person, a group, or a leader does not
like. provide examples of how the scienticfic method
is used incorrecty in history.
Week 7
Describe the functions and structrures
of the conditions Wudnt was in when he was writing
the notes which became the first modern textbook on psychology. Describe the
influence the Ogle family had. descrdibe the influence
the Prusisans at Fort ball had.
Week 8
Detained description of the Guild Structure, the steps involved with
from academic cyber, back to acadmics, to Vatican approved
acadmics, back to the guild structure, back to the dark
ages, back to roman education, Greek education, the Alexandria lighthouse, the dorian dark age, untranslated languges,
back to heirakonopolis.
Week 9
Schrodinger’s cat and the quantum field, describe Schrodinger’s cat experiment in detail as well as how
it directly applies and interacts with the function and structure of
psychology. Being two states of existence at the same time. Which can be
compared to the two states of existence humans find themselves; describe the
how much do an individual live in the real world versus how much the individual
lives in a fantasy world. In addition to the nature v nurture, as well as with
skinner
Week 10
Week 11
Week 12
Tests (You may select the number of tests to administer and when
to administer them; however, be sure to include the test type you will use to
assess learning.)
At least four activities that promote student engagement and
facilitate rapport over the course of the 12 Weeks (apart from other
discussions and assignments)
Grading criteria for discussions, assignments, and assessments
Media ideas (optional)
References
Ambrose, S. A., Bridges, M. W., DiPietro, M., Lovett, M. C.,
& Norman, M. K. (2010). How learning works: 7 research-based principles for
smart teaching. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
American Psychological Association. (2010). Ethical principles
of psychologists and code of conduct: Including 2010 amendments. Retrieved from
http://www.apa.org/ethics/code/index.aspx
Corty, E. W. (2008). Resolving a conflict between APA learning
goals and APA ethical principles. Teaching of Psychology, 35(3), 223–225.
Landis, B. D., Altman, J. D., & Cavin, J. D. (2007).
Underpinnings of academic success: Effective study skills use as a function of
academic locus of control and self-efficacy. Psi Chi Journal of Undergraduate
Research, 12(3), 126–130.
Retrieved from the Walden Library databases.
Stavredes, T. (2011). Effective online teaching: Foundations and
strategies for student success. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Svinicki, M., & McKeachie, W. J. (2014). The ethics of teaching. In McKeachie's
teaching tips: Strategies, research, and theory for college and university teachers
(14th ed., pp. 319–327). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Tabachnick, B. G., Keith-Spiegal, P., & Pope, K. S. (1991). Ethics
of teaching: Beliefs and behaviors of psychologists as educators. American
Psychologist, 46(5), 506–515.