Crim 3 - Human Behavior and Victimology: Preliminary Coverage
Crim 3 - Human Behavior and Victimology: Preliminary Coverage
Crim 3 - Human Behavior and Victimology: Preliminary Coverage
Preliminary Coverage
What is Psychology?
Since psychology is the study of the mind, how it works, and how it might affect behavior it also
attempts to understand the role human behavior plays in social dynamics while incorporating
physiological and neurological processes into its conceptions of mental functioning.
Psychologists are actively involved in studying and understanding mental processes, brain
functions, and behavior.
• Vegetative Level – responsible for nurturing and reproduction, mostly found in plants; in
human beings, for food and reproduction.
• Animal Level – movement and sensation, mostly the use of the senses and sex drives.
• Rational/Psyche/Human Level – values and morals, reasons and the will
Three Faculties of Man
• Will – the power of conscious deliberate actions; the faculty by which the rational mind
makes choice of its ends of action, and directs energies in carrying out its determinations
• Intellect – the faculty of power of perception or thought; or power of understanding
• Soul – the rational, emotional, and volitional faculties in man, conceived of as forming and
entity distinct from, often existing independently of his body.
The questions on why do people become heterosexual and others homosexuals, some
are alcoholics, some are law abiding citizen and others are criminals, some are well
adjusted and other mentally ill? What will enable us to understand these extremes of
behavior? The answer to these questions requires the study and understanding of the
influences of HEREDITY and ENVIRONMENT.
Who we’re around us can influence who we are. Just being in a high-crime neighborhood can
increase our chances of turning to crime ourselves.
All theories of crime have underlying assumptions about or perspectives on human nature.
As cited in the book of Bartol (2017), there are three major perspective namely:
Psychological criminology is the science of the behavior and mental processes of the
person who commits crime. While sociological criminology focuses primarily on groups and
society as a whole, and how they influence criminal activity, psychological criminology focuses on
individual criminal behavior—how it is acquired, evoked, maintained, and modified.
Psychological criminology has shifted its focus in several ways. First, it has taken a more
cognitive approach to studying criminal behavior. Second, it has paid more attention to biological
and neuropsychological factors. Third, it has adopted a developmental approach to studying
criminal behavior among both individuals and groups.
A. Cognitive Approach. Cognitions refer to the attitudes, beliefs, values, and thoughts that
people hold about the social environment, interrelations, human nature, and themselves.
B. Biological or Neurological Approach. The biological approach often focuses on
aggression and violent behavior.
C. Developmental Approach. Learning how criminal behavior begins and progresses is
extremely important. A developmental approach examines the changes and influences
across a person’s lifetime that may contribute to the formation of antisocial and criminal
behavior. These are usually called “risk factors.”
What is Developmental Psychology?
It is the study of how people change over time, but it also investigates how and why certain
characteristics remain consistent over the life course. Also, it involves the study of changes in
human behavior and thought from infancy to old age. Traditionally, developmental psychologists
have focused on child development, believing that most formative experiences of life occur during
infancy and childhood. But psychologists have more recently turned their attention to adolescence
and adulthood, recognizing that development continues throughout the life span. The study of
adult development focuses on the unique experiences of this stage of life and examines how
adults maintain and refine their capabilities as they age
• John Locke- He is considered the father of modern learning theory. For him, the child
was a tabula rasa or blank slate on which experience writes. The role of Locke and later
learning theorists was to emphasize the role of the environment in development
• Jean-Jacques Rousseau- He is often identified as the father of classical developmental
psychology. In his book Emile (1762), he championed a view that emphasized the natural
unfolding of the child based on an innate blueprint. He was one of the first to argue that
development took place in stages.
Take Note: (From a philosophical perspective, John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau are
the usual starting points for Western discussions of development.)
● Plump with fatty tissues, round, soft bodies with large abdomens.
● Sociable
● Fond of food and people
● Even tempered
● Affectionate
Mesomorphs with somatotonia
3. Psychotism – this describes a person with psychotic and psychopathic tendencies due
to insensitiveness, hostility and aggressiveness, recklessness and inappropriate
emotional expression.
Personality
1. ID – the unconscious part of the personality which serves as the reservoir of the primitive
and biological drives and urges. It is that part of the personality with which we are born.
ID is the animalistic self.
2. Ego – the mediator between the ID and the superego. It refers to the developing
awareness of self or the “I”. It is known as the integrator of the personality; the part that
interacts with the outside world, partly conscious and partly unconscious. As the ego
develops the reality principle supersedes or operates in concert with the pleasure principle
in guiding the behavior. The adaptive functions of the ego are the defense against anxiety.
Anxiety
According to Freud, human beings experience an extreme form of anxiety when they are
separated from their mother at birth. He called this birth trauma. It signifies change from the
environment of complete security to one in which the satisfaction of their needs is less predictable.
The function of anxiety is to warn us that, if we continue thinking or behaving in a certain way, we
will be in danger. Anxiety refers to fear or nervousness about what might happen.
1. The source, where the need arises, may be part of the whole body; a deficiency of some
kind.
2. The aim is to reduce the need until no more action is necessary; it is to give the organism
the satisfaction it now desires, thereby re-establishing internal balance.
3. The impetus is the amount of energy, force or pressure used to satisfy or gratify the
impulse; usually determined by the strength or urgency of the underlying need.
4. The object represents experiences or objects that reduce or remove body deficiency. It
refers to a thing, action or expression that allows satisfaction of the original aim.
Freud noted two basic impulses: the life/love instinct or eros and the death instinct or
thanatos. Each of these generalized impulses has a separate source of energy. The libido is the
psychic energy associated with the eros. Freud believed that the libidinal energy is expended to
prolong life. The thanatos prompts a person to return to the inorganic state that preceded life.
1. Oral stage/Infancy. This stage covers the period from birth up to the end
of the second year of life. The mouth region which includes the lips and tongue, is
the main source of gratification of the child. The child is learning to deal w/ anxiety
by gratification of oral needs such as sucking, chewing, biting and spitting are
normal activities of the child. This is also characterized by complete dependency
from others.
2. Anal stage/Toddler. This extends from the end of the second year to the
third year. The anus, through controlling and expelling feces, is the major
source of gratification for the child. Social control is developed thru
defecation and toilet training. A defective social control development will lead
to OCD.
3. Phallic stage/Preschool. This covers approximately the end of the third year to sixth year
of life. The child finds pleasure by fondling his/her genitals. The child establishes sexual
identity/genital stimulation. This stage is called the FIXATED BEHAVIOR
which means your behaviour right now was being developed during this
stage.
4. Latency/School age. Starts from sixth year to age 12. During this period, the
child shifts from deriving gratification from his/her body parts to environmental
activities like playing and learning. The child gains pleasure by being with his/her
company. At this stage, sensual motives subside. The child focuses into
conventional activities such as school work and worthwhile activities such as
sports.
Carl Gustav Jung, one of the earliest pupils of Freud, eventually created a school that he
preferred to call analytical psychology. Under his theory, the human psyche is embedded in the
past, present and future. It consists of conscious and unconscious elements, masculine and
feminine traits, rational and irrational impulses, spiritualistic and animalistic tendencies and the
tendency to bring all these contradicting behaviors into harmony with each other.
Functions of Thought
1. Sensing – detects the presence of things but does not indicate what it is.
2. Thinking – tells what a thing is; it gives names to things that are sensed.
3. Feeling – tells whether a thing is acceptable or unacceptable; determines
what a thing is worth to the individual; pertains to liking and disliking.
4. Intuiting – hunches about past or future events when factual information
is not available.
Stages of Development under Analytic Psychology