Lesson 01: evolution of clinical psychology

Clinical psychology evolved from ancient views of mental illness as supernatural to a scientific profession focused on assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of psychological disorders

Ancient Roots

Mental disorders were once attributed to spiritual causes, but Hippocrates in ancient Greece proposed physical explanations, shifting toward naturalistic views. The Renaissance brought more scientific inquiry, laying groundwork for modern approaches

19th-Century Foundations

Lightner Witmer opened the first psychological clinic in 1896 at the University of Pennsylvania, targeting children's learning issues and coining "clinical psychology." He formalized the field in 1907, emphasizing practical interventions over pure theory.

World Wars Expansion

World War I introduced group testing like Army Alpha and Beta for recruits, highlighting assessment's value. World War II spurred psychotherapy training for veterans, boosting professional growth via government funding

Post-War Models

The 1949 Boulder Conference established the scientist-practitioner model, training psychologists in both research and practice. This integrated empirical science with clinical work, defining PhD programs

Theoretical Shifts

Psychoanalysis (Freud) dominated early, focusing on the unconscious; behaviorism (Skinner, Wolpe) stressed observable actions. Humanistic (Rogers, Maslow) and cognitive approaches emerged in the 1960s-70s, leading to dominant cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT).

Modern Developments

Evidence-based practices rose in the 1990s, with DSM-III (1980) standardizing diagnosis. Today, it incorporates cultural competence, teletherapy, and neuropsychology amid digital advances.


Last modified: Thursday, 29 January 2026, 12:26 PM