1st Edition

The Nature of Intelligence

By Thurstone, L L Copyright 1999
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    204 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1999. The author writing in 1923, starts with the assumption that conduct originates in the actor himself, and tries to discover what intelligent conduct may mean if we follow this assumption to its limits. He then sets about to harmonize three schools of thought about human nature which have the appearance of being irreconcilably disparate. Stated in a nutshell, his message is that “psychology starts with the unrest of the inner self, and it completes its discovery in the contentment of the inner self”.

    I. THE STIMULUS-RESPONSE FALLACY IN PSYCHOLOGY II. THE CLASSIFICATION OF BEHAVIOUR • III. MIND AS UNFINISHED CONDUCT IV. STAGES OF THE REFLEX CIRCUIT. v. THE PRINCIPLE OF PROTECTIVE ANJUSTMENT VI. THE PRECONSCIOUS PHASE OF THE REFLEX CIRCUIT VII. OVERT AND MENTAL TRIAL AND ERROR VIII. INHIBITION AND INTELLIGENCE. IX. THE SENSE QUALITIES x. AUTISTIC THINKING XI. THE FUNCTION OF INEFFECTIVE ADJUSTMENTS XII. A DEFINITION OF INTELLIGENCE

    Biography

    L L, Thurstone