1st Edition

A New Look at New Realism The Psychology and Philosophy of E. B. Holt

By Eric Charles Copyright 2012
    330 Pages
    by Routledge

    330 Pages
    by Routledge

    This volume brings to the attention of contemporary readers a tradition of psychological thought that has received little attention over the last century. Psychology's history has been unimaginatively presented as a fight between behaviorists and mentalists. A third alternative, the New Realism, which cuts through that dichotomy, has been lost.

    "The New Realism" was indeed once new. This volume provides a glimpse of how this school of thought attempted to redefine the notion of mental processes, including consciousness, in psychological theorizing. Holt's rejected the nativity of iconoclastic Watsonian behaviorists, and thus the New Realism was thoughtful in ways that behaviorist social engineering was not. The implications of these innovations in psychological theorizing are traced from the beginning of the twentieth century to the contemporary period. The contributors provide these intellectual links, along with efforts to look at the relatedness of the human organism and its world. At their beginning, these ideas are embedded in a reverence for William James's work, particularly his later Radical Empiricism. In contemporary psychology, this legacy has given us the framework of ecological psychology as we know it today, and provides the basis for several modern critiques of cognitive psychology.

    The present volume opens the door for future historical inquiries. This is an exemplary addition to the series on the History of Psychological Ideas.

    1: E. B. Holt to William James, 1905; I: The Specific Response and the Problem of Illusory Experiences; 2: Observing Mental Processes; 3: Holt’s Realism: New Reasons for Behavior Analysis; 4: Realism and Illusion: An Explication of Holt’s Approach; 5: When Is an Illusion an Illusion? An Examination of Contrast Information in Grouping and Grid Phenomena; II: Holt’s Legacy and Holt as Legacy; 6: William James’s Radical Empiricism: Did E. B. Holt Get It Right?; 7: A Dislocation of Consciousness; 8: Ecological Realism as a Reaction to New Realism: Holt’s to Gibson; 9: Holt’s “Recession of the Stimulus” and the Emergence of the “Situation” In Psychology; III: Beyond Representation; 10: Interview with an Old New Realist; 11: Against Representationalism: James Gibson’s Secret Intellectual Debt to E. B. Holt; 12: James J. Gibson to Edward Reed, 1979

    Biography

    Eric Charles