Gestalt psychology

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Definition
  1. Noun:
    • A school of psychology that emphasizes the importance of holistic perception and patterns: Gestalt psychology is a theory that argues the human mind perceives and understands things as unified wholes or forms (Gestalts) rather than as simple collections of individual parts. It focuses on configurational properties and the idea that "the whole is different from the sum of its parts."
Usage Examples
  • Noun:
    • Gestalt psychology was influential in the development of cognitive science.
    • The principles of gestalt psychology are often applied in visual design to explain how people group similar elements.
Advanced Usage
  • "Gestalt principles" or "Gestalt laws of perception": Refers to specific rules, such as proximity, similarity, and closure, that describe how people naturally organize visual elements into groups or unified wholes.
    • Designers use Gestalt principles to create more intuitive user interfaces.
Variants and Related Words
  • Gestalt (n): The unified whole, form, or pattern that is perceived as more than the sum of its parts.
    • The artist aimed to create a pleasing gestalt with the composition.
  • Gestaltist (n): A proponent or practitioner of Gestalt psychology.
  • Gestalt therapy (n): A form of psychotherapy that grew out of Gestalt psychology, focusing on personal responsibility and present-moment awareness.
Synonyms
  • Holistic psychology: Emphasizes the whole system rather than its constituent parts.
  • Configurationism: An older term sometimes used synonymously with Gestalt psychology, stressing the importance of configuration.
Related Phrases
  • "Gestalt shift": A change in one's perception of an image or concept, where the same elements are suddenly seen as a different whole (e.g., the famous duck-rabbit illusion).
    • Experiencing a Gestalt shift can help in solving creative problems.
Related Idioms
  • "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts": This idiom encapsulates the core philosophy of Gestalt psychology.
    • Our team works so well together; it's a case of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts.
Noun
  1. (psychology) a theory of psychology that emphasizes the importance of configurational properties