A source book in the history of psychology
(Book)

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Published:
Cambridge : Harvard University Press, 1965.
Format:
Book
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BF81 .H4
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Nov 29, 2006
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Physical Desc:
xvii, 636 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Language:
English

Notes

Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 620-625) and index.
Citations
APA Citation (style guide)

Herrnstein, R. J., & Boring, E. G. (1965). A source book in the history of psychology. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Herrnstein, Richard J. and Edwin Garrigues Boring. 1965. A Source Book in the History of Psychology. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Herrnstein, Richard J. and Edwin Garrigues Boring, A Source Book in the History of Psychology. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1965.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Herrnstein, Richard J., and Edwin Garrigues Boring. A Source Book in the History of Psychology. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1965.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
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2781103d-d532-2096-0cce-f0ffbceed552
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Last Sierra Extract TimeApr 19, 2024 05:56:27 PM
Last File Modification TimeApr 19, 2024 05:56:49 PM
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MARC Record

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24512|a A source book in the history of psychology /|c edited by Richard J. Herrnstein [and] Edwin G. Boring.
264 1|a Cambridge :|b Harvard University Press,|c 1965.
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4901 |a Source books in the history of the sciences.
504 |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 620-625) and index.
5050 |a 1. Aristotle on the five senses, ca. 350 B.C. -- 2. Isaac Newton on the seven colors of the sprectrum, 1675 -- 3. Isaac Newton on the color circle, 1704 -- 4. Thomas Young on Newton and the excitation of the retina by colors, 1802 -- 5. John Locke on primary and secondary qualities, 1690 -- 6. Charles Bell on spinal nerve roots, 1811 -- 7. François Magendie on spinal nerve roots, 1822 -- 8. Charles Bell on the specificity of sensory nerves, 1811 -- Johannes Müller on the specific energies of nerves, 1838 -- 10. Ernest Heinrich Weber on the sense of touch and common sensibility, 1846 -- 11. Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz on the three-color theory of vision and visual specific nerve energies, 1860 -- 12. Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz on the resonance theory of hearing and auditory specific nerve energies, 1863 -- 13. Max von Frey on the four cutaneous senses, 1904 -- 14. Edward Bradford Titchener on the number of sensory elements, 1896.
5050 |a 15. Pierre Bouguer on the differential threshold for illumination, 1760 -- 16. Charles Éduard Joseph Delezenne on the differential threshold for the pitch of tones, 1827 -- 17. Ernst Heinrich Weber on Weber's law, 1834 --18. Gustav Theodor Fechner on Fechner's law, 1860 -- 19. Joseph Antoine Ferdinand Plateau on the measure of sensation, 1872 -- 20. Joseph Rémi Léopold Delboeuf on sensed contrast as the masure of sensation, 1883 -- 21. Edward Bradford Titchener on the sense distance as the measure of sensation, 1905 -- 22. Epicurus on perception of objects as mediated by the images that emanate from the objects, ca. 300 B.C. -- 23. Johannes Kepler on the crystallin humor as a lens and the inversion of the retinal image, 1604 -- 24. William Molyneux on the inverted retinal image, 1692 -- 25. Johannes Müller on subjective visual size and position in relation to the retinal image, 1826 -- 26. George Malcolm Stratton on visual localization and the inversion of the retinal image, 1897 -- 27. René Descartes on the visual perception of size, shape, and distance, 1638 -- 28. George Berkeley on the visual perception of distance and magnitude, 1709 -- 29. Charles Wheatstone on binocular parallax and the stereoscopic perception of depth, 1838.
5050 |a 30. Immanual Kant on the A Priori nature of space, 1781 -- 31. Rudolf Hermann Lotze on local signs in their relation to the perception of space, 1852 -- 32. Ernest Heinrich Weber on sensory circles and cutaneous space perception, 1852 -- 33. Ewald Hering on the nativistic theory of visual space perception, 1866 -- 35. Max Wertheimer on the Phi phenomenon as an example of nativism in perception, 1912 -- 36. George Berkeley on the role of association in the objective reference of perception, 1709 -- 37. Thomas Reid on the distinction between sensation and perception, 1785 -- 38. Thomas Brown on sensation, perception and the associative explanation of objective reference, 1820 -- 39. John Stuart Mill on the permanent possibilities of sensation, 1865 -- 40. Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz on perception and the unconscious conclusion, 1866 -- 41. Edward Bradford Titchener on the context theory of meaning, 1910 -- 42. Edwin Bissell Holt on response as the essence of cognition, 1915 -- 43. Max Wertheimer on objects as immediately given to consiousness, 1923.
5050 |a 44. René Descartes on the interaction of mind and brain, 1650 -- 45. Franz Joseph Gall on phrenology, the localization of the functions of the brain, 1825 -- 46. Pierre Jean Marie Flourens on the functions of the brain, 1824 -- 47. Paul Broca on the speech center, 1861 -- 48. Gustav Fritsch and Eduard Hitzig on cerebral motor centers, 1870 -- 49. John Hughlings Jackson on dissolution of the nervous system, 1884 -- 50. Shepherd Ivory Franz on the variability of the motor centers, 1915 -- 51. Karl Spencer Lashley on cerebral equipotentiality and mass action, 1929 -- 52. Henry Head on vigilance, 1926 -- 53. Ewald Hering: anticipation of psychophysiological isomorphism, 1878 -- 54. Georg Elias Müller on the psychophysical axioms, 1896 -- 55. Max Wertheimer on the isomorphic relation between seen movement and cortical short circuit, 1912 -- 56. Wolfgang Köhler on isomorphism, 1920 -- 57. René Descartes on mechanism in human action, 1662 -- 58. Julien Offray de la Mettrie on the extension of mechanism to the human soul, 1748 -- 59. David Hartley on voluntary and involuntary action, 1749 -- 60. Robert Whytt on empirical reflexology, 1751 -- 61. George Prochaska on the nervous system, 1784 -- 62. Marshall Hall on the spinal nervous system, 1843, 1850 -- 63. Ivan Michailovich Sechenov on reflexology and psychology, 1863 -- 64. John Dewey against reflexology, 1896.
5050 |a 65. Aristotle on the associative nature of memory, ca. 350 B.C. -- 66. Thomas Hobbes on the train of thought, 1651 -- 67. John Locke on disorders of the mind, 1700 -- 68. George Berkeley on arbitrary connections among ideas, 1733 -- 69. David Hume on a psychological analogue of gravitation, 1739 -- 70. David Hartley on association: successive and simultaneous, simple and complex, 1749 -- 71. Thomas Brown on the secondary laws of association, 1820 -- 72. James Mill on mental mechanics, 1829 -- 73. John Stuart Mill on mental chemistry, 1843 -- 74. Herbert Spencer on intelligence, 1855 -- 75. William James on the limitations of associationism, 1890 -- 76. Wilhelm Wundt on psychological analysis and creative synthesis, 1896 -- 77. Charles Robert Darwin on the theory of evolution, 1859 -- 78. Francis Galton on the inheritance of intelligence, 1869 -- 79. Francis Galton on mental capacity, 1883 -- 80. James McKeen Cattell on mental tests, 1890 -- 81. Alfred Binet and Victor Henri on the psychology of individual differences, 1895 -- Hermann Ebbinghaus on the completion test, 1897 -- 83. Stella Emily Sharp on a test of mental testing, 1899 -- 84. Clark Wissler on the inadequacy of mental tests, 1901.
5050 |a 85. Charles Edward Spearman on general intelligence, 1904 -- 86. William Stern on the mental quotient, 1912 -- 87. George John Romanes on comparative psychology, 1882 -- 88. Conwy Lloyd Morgan on Lloyd Morgan's canon, 1894 -- 89. Jacques Loeb on associative memory, 1899 -- 90. Herbert Spencer Jennings on the continuity of psychological processes, 1906 -- 91. William James on the function of consiousness, 1890 -- 92. James Mark Baldwin on the psychology of children, 1895 -- 93. James Rowland Angell on functionalism, 1906 -- 94. John Broadus Watson on behaviorism, 1913 -- 95. Hermann Ebbinghaus on the learning of nonsense syllables, 1885 -- 96. Mary Whiton Calkins on the learning of paired associates, 1896 -- 97. Edward Lee Thorndike on animal learning, 1898 -- 98. Robert Mearns Yerkes on the intelligence of the turtle, 1901 -- 99. Willard Stanton Small on the maze, 1901 -- 100. Edward Lee Thorndike and Robert Sessions Woodworth on transfer of training, 1901 -- 101. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov on conditioned reflexes, 1904 -- 102. Wolfgang Köhler on the insight of apes, 1917.
5050 |a 103. René Descartes, 1650 -- 104. John Locke, 1690 -- 105. Immanuel Kant, 1781 -- 106. Johannes Müller, 1840 -- 107. Gustav Theodor Fechner, 1860 -- 108. Alexander Bain, 1873 -- 109. Wilhelm Wundt, 1896 -- 110. Ernst Mach, 1886 -- 111. Edward Bradford Titchener, 1910 -- 112. Franz Brentano, 1874 -- 113. James Ward, 1886 -- 114. William James, 1890 -- 115. Robert Sessions Woodworth, 1918 -- 116. William McDougall, 1923.
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