1st Edition

Essays in Social Pychcology

By George Mead Copyright 2001
244 Pages
by Routledge

244 Pages
by Routledge

172 Pages
by Routledge

George H. Mead (1863-1931) is a central, founding figure of modern sociology, comparable to Karl Marx and Max Weber. Mead's early work, prior to his posthumous publications that appeared after 1932, is believed to be a series of articles contemporary scholarship defines as disconnected. A previously unknown, never published set of galleys for a book of essays by Mead, written between 1892 and... Read more
I: The Biologic Individual; 1: The Social Character of Instinct 1; 2: Social Psychology as Counterpart to Physiological Psychology 1; 3: What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose? 1; 4: Emotion and Instinct 1; 5: A Psychological Study of the Use of Stimulants 1; II: The Beginning of the Social Act; 6: The Problem of Comparative Psychology 1; 7: Concerning Animal Perception 1; 8: On Perception and Imitation 1; 9: The Relation of the Embryological Development to Education 1; 10: The Child and His Environment 1; III: Education from the Kindergarten to the University; 11: The Kindergarten and Play 1; 12: The Relation of Play to Education 1; 13: On the Social Situation in the School 1; 14: The University and the School of Education 1; 15: The University and the Elementary Schools 1; 16: Science in the High School 1; 17: The Teaching ofScience in college 1; 18: Indutrial Education, the Working-Man and the School 1

Biography

George Mead