H. Holmes Psychology Paper

687 Words2 Pages

Caleb Randall
Mr. Curran
English II Honors
30 November 2015 Herman Webster Mudgett also acknowledged as H. H. Holmes was America’s first serial killer recorded. Holmes was predicted to have murdered over 200 men and women typically women. At a very young age Holmes was exceptionally clever. Holmes captured an interest for both human anatomy and medicine at a young age as well. During Holmes’s college career, he executed various insurance scams due to stealing dead bodies from the schools mortuary. Holmes later moved to Chicago where he owned a pharmacy; previously owned by an employer that went missing days after he bought it from her. Spending the revenues from the pharmacy, he built a “castle” as some people knew it. The “Castle” had a
Biological Approach deals with how your nervous system, hormones and genetic makeup affect your behavior. The biological perspective is essentially a way of looking at human problems and actions. The brain relies on a large number of chemicals (called neurotransmitters and hormones) to send signals between neurons. Too much or too little of any of these chemicals can result in over- or under-activity in various parts of the brain, which results in changes to thinking, feeling and behavior. For example, some researchers have shown how behavior can be affected by altered levels of sex hormones. In Holmes’ case, many of his victims, no one knows for certain the total number, were women who he seduced, swindled and then killed. His behavior could have been a result of a hormone imbalance. Holmes had a habit of getting engaged to a woman and then for his fiancée to suddenly "disappear." Others were lured there by the offer of employment. The reason for Holmes to kill mostly women is unknown but the Biological Approach could be one of the five perspectives on Holmes
The Behavioral Approach is believed that external environmental stimuli influence your behavior and that you can be trained to act a certain way. The behavioral approach is really effective when you don't care what someone thinks, as long as you get the desired behavior. The influence of these theories affects us every day and throughout our lives, impacting everything from why we follow the rules of the road when driving to how advertising companies build campaigns to get us to buy their products. Holmes, in that same

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