صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني

POWELL LECTURES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY

PART L SCHOOLS OF BEHAVIORISM

Chapter 1. "What the Nursery Has to Say about Instincts”

Chapter 2. "Experimental Studies on the Growth of the Emotions"
Chapter 3. "Recent Experiments on How We Lose and Change Our Emotional

Equipment

Chapter 4. "Psychology and Anthroponomy"

PART II. DYNAMIC PSYCHOLOGY

Chapter 5. "Dynamic Psychology"

John B. Watson

John E. Watson

John B. Watson Walter S. Hunter

PART III GESTALT

Chapter 6. "Mental Development"
Chapter 7. "Intelligence of Apes"

Chapter 8. “An Aspect of Gestalt Psychology”

PART IV. PURPOSIVE GROUPS

Chapter 9. "Three Fundamental Errors of the Behaviorists and the Reconciliation of the Purposive and Mechanistic Concepts"

Chapter. 10. “Awareness, Consciousness Co-Consciousness, and Animal Intel-
ligence from the Point of View of the Data of Abnormal Psy-
chology-a Biological Theory of Consciousness"

Chapter 11. "The Problem of Personality: How Many Selves Have We?"
Chapter 12. "Men or Robots?” I

Chapter 13. "Men or Robots?" II

PART V. REACTION PSYCHOLOGY

Robert S. Woodworth

Kurt Kofke Wolfgang Köhler

Wolfgang Köhler

Morton Prince

Morton Prince
Morton Prince

William McDougall
William McDougall

Chapter 14. "The Theoretical Aspect of Psychology"

Chapter 15. "The Experimental Methods of Psychology”

Chapter 16. "The Applications of Psychology to Social Problems"

PART VI. PSYCHOLOGIES CALLED “STRUCTURAL”

Chapter 17. "Historical Derivation"
Chapter 18. “The Work of the Structuralista”
Chapter 19. "The Psychological Organism"

Knight Dunlap

Knight Dunlap

Knight Dunlap

Madison Bentley

Madison Bentley

Madison Bentley

Through the generosity of Dr. Elmer Ellsworth Powell, Clark University has been enabled to invite a group of the world's distinguished psychologists to lecture at Clark on the fundamental concepts of contemporary psychology. A majority of the world's significant schools of psychology are thus represented. The series constitutes a unique and significant cross-section of the theoretical bases of contemporary psychology. Here are the norms with which later the Psychologies Of 1935 or the Psychologies Of 1950 can be directly compared. This book is highly suitable for use as a text-book in advanced courses in general or theoretical psychology. The volume contains a full-page half-tone of each author in the series, each one being inserted at the proper place in the volume. Approximately five hundred pages of solid ten-point type, 4 by 6.5. Beautifully bound in red cloth, each volume incased in a heavy mailing box. Psychologies Of 1925 will be mailed, postpaid, to any address in the world upon receipt of proper order. Price $6.00,

CLARK UNIVERSITY

Department of Psychological Publications

Worcester, Massachusetts

U. S. A.

BY

CARL MURCHISON, PH.D.

Professor of Psychology and

Director of the Psychological Laboratories
in Clark University

For lawyers, physicians, sociologists, psychologists, social workers, and those primarily interested in the problems of social conduct.

CHAPTER

PART 1. OPINIONS AND NORMS

1. Pre-War Contemporary Opinion

2. The Idea that Criminals are Feeble-Minded

3. Extent to Which Army and Criminal Norms are Representative

PART II. WHITE NATIVE BORN MEN CRIMINALS

[graphic]

4. Some Geographical Concomitants

5. Intelligence and Types of Crime

6. Intelligence and Recidivism

7.

8. Chronological Age

9. Industrial Occupations

10. Some Technical Statistical Results

11. Religion

17.

Seasonal Distribution

13. Length of Incarceration

14. Height and Weight

15. Some Marital Concomitants

1

[blocks in formation]

This book differs decidedly from most books in this field in that it does not support a polisy of maternalism towards criminals. The author in his concluding chapter supports the following changes in criminal court procedure:

1. The abolition of the jury system.

2. Uniform punishment for the insane, the feeble-minded, and the young.

3. The abolition of the system of release on bond.

4. The abolition of the indeterminate sentence.

5. The abolition of the parole system.

[ocr errors]

6. The application of the deterministic philosophy to the behavior of the State as well as te the behavior of the criminal.

7. The third penitentiary conviction to carry an automatic death penalty.

PRICE $4.00. WILL BE MAILED TO ANY ADDRESS, POSTAGE PREPAID UPON

RECEIPT OF THIS AMOUNT

CLARK UNIVERSITY

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGICAl publicaTIONS

Worcester, Massachusetts

U. S. A.

[graphic][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed]

THE CASE FOR AND AGAINST PSYCHICAL BELIEF

An international symposium on these problems of absorbing human interest by Sir Oliver Lodge, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Frederick Bligh Bond, L. R. G. Crandon, Mary Austin, Margaret Deland, William McDougall, Hans Driesch, Walter Franklin Prince, F. C. S. Schiller, John E. Coover, Gardner Murphy, Joseph Jastrow and Harry Houdini.

A discussion of the problems of death, survival, and communication that ranges from the ardent convictions of Sir Oliver Lodge and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to the antagonism of Professor Jastrow and Harry Houdini.

Profusely illustrated, bound in red cloth, gold lettered. Packed in heavy carton, 400 pages, postpaid $3.75.

CLARK UNIVERSITY

Department of Psychological Publications

WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A.

[blocks in formation]

(With a Note on the Growth and Decline of These Abilities)
From the Psychological Laboratory, Stanford University

By

RAYMOND ROYCE WILLOUGHBY

Clark University

*Received for publication by Carl Murchison of the Editorial Board.

WORGESTER, MASS.

COPYRIGHT, 1927, BY CLARK UNIVERSITY

Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Worcester, Massachusetts, December 1, 1925, under Act of March 3, 1897.

« السابقةمتابعة »