1st Edition

Topics in the History of Psychology Volume I

Edited By G. A. Kimble, K. Schlesinger Copyright 1985
    424 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    First published in 1985. At one end of historical time scale, speculations about psychological processes go back to classical Greek philosophy and beyond. For centuries thereafter, the treatment of psychological subject matter remained largely in the domain of other disciplines, especially philosophy, where it became inextricably interwoven with epistemology. The chapters of this book glance only briefly at these philosophical antecedents, to review the basic concepts and principles that early investigators were to take for granted. They tend then to move to the end of the last century when the systematic study of psychological processes began.

    Contents of Volume 2, Preface, 1. A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO A HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2. CONDITIONING AND LEARNING, 3. HUMAN LEARNING AND MEMORY, 4. COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND ETHOLOGY, 5. SENSORY PROCESSES: VISION, 6. TASTE AND OLFACTION, 7. A HISTORY OF PERCEPTION, 8. A HISTORY OF THE STUDY OF THE CORTEX: CHANGES IN THE CONCEPT OF THE SENSORY PATHWAY, AUTHOR INDEX, SUBJECT INDEX

    Biography

    Gregory A. Kimble Duke University, Kurt Schlesinger University of Colorado