Psychological principles / by James Ward.

"Just forty years ago, that is in 1878--when I began lecturing on Psychology--the plan of this book was laid down. As the lectures proceeded, abstracts of some of them were privately printed for discussion at a Moral Sciences Club, in which some other Cambridge books also took their rise. The f...

Whakaahuatanga katoa

I tiakina i:
Ngā taipitopito rārangi puna kōrero
Kaituhi matua: Ward, James, 1843-1925 (Author)
Hōputu: iPukapuka
Reo:English
I whakaputaina: Cambridge [England] : University Press, 1918.
Rangatū:Cambridge psychological library.
Ngā marau:
Urunga tuihono:APA PsycBooks
Whakaahuatanga
Whakarāpopototanga:"Just forty years ago, that is in 1878--when I began lecturing on Psychology--the plan of this book was laid down. As the lectures proceeded, abstracts of some of them were privately printed for discussion at a Moral Sciences Club, in which some other Cambridge books also took their rise. The first two of these abstracts, written in 1880, were afterwards reproduced without revision in the American Journal of Speculative Philosophy for 1882-1883, one corresponding to the present chapter II, and the other, entitled 'Objects and their Interaction, ' to parts of the present chapters IV-VII. A third on Space and Time, written in 1881, was rejected by the late G. Croom Robertson the editor of Mind, as too difficult and revolutionary for publication as it stood. But afterwards he accepted and published what were to have been the two opening chapters of a book bearing the same title as this. Other chapters were to follow, but circumstances diverted them elsewhere. I have done my best in the text and still more in notes to place a studious reader au courant with the psychological literature of the present day. But there is a psychology which arrogates to itself the title of 'new.' New it undoubtedly is, and there are signs that in its present form it will not long survive. In any case it is not psychology--save in so far as it occasionally furnishes the psychologist with material of some value. As a method in the hands of psychologists it has done some good: as a pretended science in the hands of tyros whose psychological training has not even begun, it has done infinite harm. This book, however, is not so antiquated as to ignore altogether the character and claims of this 'modern' psychology, as the reader may see"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Whakaahuatanga ōkiko:1 online resource (xiv, 478 pages).
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