hidden pixel

Filipino Psychology Information

Filipino psychology, or Sikolohiyang Pilipino, in Filipino, is defined as the psychology rooted on the experience, ideas, and cultural orientation of the Filipinos. It is regulated by the Pambansang Samahan sa Sikolohiyang Pilipino, (National Organization of Filipino Psychology), in English, which was established in 1975 by Virgilio Enriquez, regarded by many as the Father of Filipino Psychology.

Contents

Basic orientation and context

Filipino psychology is usually thought of as a branch of Asian psychology, the placement, determined primarily on culture. However, there is an ongoing debate on the make-up of Philippine culture, because this will generally determine whether Philippine Psychology is to be placed under the realms of either Asian psychology or Western psychology. The vast majority of Philippine psychologists seem to prefer to classify this field as Asian, but there is a steadily growing body that attempts to place the field as Eurasian.

Four traditions

Zeus Salazar (1985), a historian, identified four traditions upon which Philippine psychology is rooted:

Basic tenets

Core value or Kapwa

Kapwa, meaning 'togetherness', is the core construct of Filipino Psychology. Kapwa refers to community; not doing things alone. Kapwa has two categories, Ibang Tao (other people) and Hindi Ibang Tao (not other people).

Pivotal interpersonal value

Linking socio-personal value

Accommodative surface values

Confrontative surface values

Societal values

Approaches and methods

Approaches, or lapit, and methods, or pamamaraan, in Filipino Psychology are different from that of Western Psychology. In Filipino Psychology, the subjects, or participants, called kalahok, are considered as equal in status to the researcher. The participants are included in the research as a group, and not as individuals - hence, an umpukan, or natural cluster, is required to serve as the participants, per se. The researcher is introduced to a natural cluster by a tulay (bridge), who is a part of the umpukan and is a well-respected man in the community. Some of the many approaches and methods used in Filipino Psychology are:

Psychopathology

Filipino psychopathology, or sikopatolohiya in Filipino, from Spanish psicopatologia, is the study of abnormal psychology in the Filipino context. Several 'mental' disorders have been identified that can be found only in the Philippines or in other nations with which Filipinos share racial connections. Examples of such are:

Filipino psychopathology also refers to the different manifestations of mental disorders in Filipino people. One example of such is the manifestation of depression and schizophrenia in Filipinos, which are for the most part, less violent.

Psycho-medicine

See also: Philippine Mythology

Filipino psychomedicine, or sikomedikal na sikolohiya in Filipino, is the application of basic psychology to native healing practices loosely considered as 'medicine'. These practices are closely tied to the faith healers, as well as to the native pagan priestesses like the babaylan or katalonan, who were suppressed by the Spaniards during their colonization of the Philippines. Examples of such practices include:

Organizations

See also

References

External links

Psychology

History · Portal · Psychologist

Basic psychology

Abnormal · Affective science · Affective neuroscience · Behaviorism · Behavioral neuroscience · Cognitive · Cognitive neuroscience · Comparative · Cultural · Developmental · Differential · Evolutionary · Experimental · Intelligence · Mathematical · Personality · Positive · Psycholinguistics · Psychophysics · Psychophysiology · Social · Theoretical

Applied psychology

Assessment · Clinical · Community psychology · Consumer · Counseling · Educational · Forensic · Health · Industrial and organizational · Legal · Media · Military · Occupational health · Pastoral · Political · Psychometrics · School · Sport and exercise · Systems · Traffic

Methodologies

Animal testing · Archival research · Behavior genetics · Case study · Content analysis · Experiments · Human subject research · Interviews · Neuroimaging · Observation · Qualitative research · Quantitative research · Self-report inventory · Statistical surveys

Orientations

Adlerian · Analytical · Behaviorism · Cognitive behavioral therapy · Cognitivism · Descriptive · Ecological systems theory · Existential therapy · Family therapy · Feminist therapy · Gestalt psychology · Humanistic · Narrative therapy · Philosophy · Psychoanalysis · Psychodynamic psychotherapy · Rational emotive behavior therapy · Transpersonal

Eminent psychologists

Alfred Adler · Gordon Allport · Albert Bandura · Aaron Beck · John Bowlby · Raymond Cattell · Kenneth and Mamie Clark · Albert Ellis · Erik Erikson · Hans Eysenck · Leon Festinger · Sigmund Freud · Harry Harlow · Donald O. Hebb · Clark L. Hull · William James · Carl Jung · Jerome Kagan · Kurt Lewin · Ivar Lovaas · Abraham Maslow · David McClelland · George A. Miller · Neal E. Miller · Walter Mischel · Ivan Pavlov · Jean Piaget · Carl Rogers · Stanley Schachter · B. F. Skinner · Edward Thorndike · John B. Watson

Lists

Counseling topics · Disciplines · Important publications · Organizations · Psychologists · Psychotherapies · Research methods · Schools of thought · Timeline · Topics

See also Wiktionary definition · Wiktionary category · Wikisource · Wikimedia Commons · Wikiquote · Wikinews ·

Wikibooks

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sat Mar 17 12:39:29 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.