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Hedonic Experience And Sensation
Howard Crosby Warren
Review publishing co., 1908
Senses and sensation
(This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curat...)
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Hedonic Experience And Sensation, Psychological Literature (1908)
(This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of th...)
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A History of the Association Psychology From Hartley to Lewes: Dissertation Submitted to the Board of University Studies of the Johns Hopkins ... Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, March, 1917
(Excerpt from A History of the Association Psychology From...)
Excerpt from A History of the Association Psychology From Hartley to Lewes: Dissertation Submitted to the Board of University Studies of the Johns Hopkins University in Conformity With the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, March, 1917
Another very complete history of associationism is found in La psychologie anglaise contemporaine,' by Th. Ribot which covers the movement from Hartley to Lewes in a very adequate manner. As a his tory Of Associationism (which it does not claim to be) its chief defect is the omission of writers prior to Hartley.
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Elements Of Human Psychology - Primary Source Edition
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This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923....)
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Elements Of Human Psychology
revised
Howard Crosby Warren, Leonard Carmichael
Houghton Mifflin company, 1922
Psychology; General; Psychology; Psychology / General
Howard Crosby Warren was an American psychologist and the first chairman of the Princeton University Psychology department.
Background
Howard Crosby Warren was born at Montclair, N. J. , the son of Dorman Theodore and Harriet (Crosby) Warren, and a descendant of Arthur Warren who was resident in Weymouth, Massachussets, before 1638. At the age of eighteen months he was badly burned and suffered great pain from a succession of operations. The power of endurance which he developed and the emotional restraint which he learned were outstanding traits of his personality. It is not surprising that, under the circumstances, he became introspective at an early age and that, even as a boy, he was interested in religious and psychological problems. Although brought up in a Puritanical household, he was unusually critical of dogmas and taboos, and early developed a dislike for conventional beliefs and explanations, an attitude which marked all of his subsequent thinking. He received the degree of Ph. D. at the Johns Hopkins University in 1917.
Education
Owing to his bad health, his secondary education was very irregular. He prepared for college under a private tutor and was graduated from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University) in 1889. A year or two previous to his matriculation, he had become interested in the Darwinian theory, and during his college years he became acquainted with the writings of Spencer, Huxley, Clifford, and Tyndall. It is in this period that we find the source of his unchanging belief in a deterministic interpretation of mental processes and the beginning of his revolt against mysticism. He found the teaching of James McCosh inspiring, but was more attracted by the philosophy of Spencer and the psychology of the British Associationists. An indication of the profound impression made upon him by these British thinkers is the fact that in 1921, after twenty years' work, he published his History of the Association Psychology. He also studied the psychology of George T. Ladd and became acquainted with some of the early writings of William James. In his senior year he was granted the mental science fellowship for graduate work. In 1890 he was appointed instructor in the department of philosophy, and assisted in elementary psychology and logic. After two years of graduate study and teaching at Princeton, where in 1891 he received the degree of M. A.
Career
He went to Germany to work in Wilhelm Wundt's laboratory in Leipzig. It was here that he became acquainted with Edward Bradford Titchener, with whom he later developed one of the strongest professional intimacies of his life. Later he studied with Hermann Ebbinghaus at Berlin and with Carl Stumpf at Munich. He read Hugo Münsterberg's Willenshandlung and was strongly influenced by the psychophysiological aspect of Münsterberg's action theory. In 1893 he accepted a position as assistant, with the title of demonstrator, in the new psychological laboratory of Princeton. His advance was rapid. In 1896 he became assistant professor, in 1902 professor of experimental psychology, in 1904 director of the psychological laboratory, and in 1914 Stuart Professor of Psychology. He worked with courage and persistence toward the formal separation of psychology and philosophy at Princeton, and in 1920 became first chairman of a separate department of psychology. At this time the laboratory was inadequately housed in Nassau Hall. Through his efforts, and in part through his financial support, Eno Hall, a building devoted entirely to psychology, was erected in 1924. In order to have more time for his literary work, he withdrew from the directorship of the laboratory, but remained chairman of the department until 1932. A few of Warren's numerous papers in scientific journals were on experimental work, but the majority were of a theoretical nature. In 1919 he published his Human Psychology. This was followed a few years later by his Elements of Human Psychology (1922), which was translated into French in 1923. This textbook was used extensively and made a popular appeal because of its concise description of fundamental facts, its conservatively behavioristic point of view, and the absence of extreme views on the nature of mental processes. Although impressed by John B. Watson's behaviorism, Warren believed strongly in introspection. He admitted the fact of consciousness but was opposed to any form of vitalism. He was a firm believer in a neurological explanation of all mental processes and, in consistency with this view, championed the double aspect of the relation of mind and body in "The Mental and the Physical: the Double-Aspect View" (Psychological Review, March 1914), his address as president of the American Psychological Association. One of Warren's greatest contributions to psychology was the development of the publications of the Psychological Review. From 1894 to 1914 he edited or compiled the Psychological Index, either alone or in conjunction with other psychologists. In 1901 he was made associate editor and business manager of the publications. He was joint editor of the Psychological Bulletin from 1904 to 1934, and editor of the Psychological Review from 1916 until his death. He was intensely interested in words and definitions. In 1915 he was appointed chairman of the committee on terminology of the American Psychological Association. When the committee was discharged in 1924 only seventy-nine terms had been defined. Warren therefore determined to edit a comprehensive dictionary of psychology, and most of his time during his last years was occupied with this task. His Dictionary of Psychology, published posthumously in 1934, was practically completed when he died.
Achievements
Howard C. Warren is today commemorated by the Society of Experimental Psychologists, which he helped found, and who annually awards to one of its members the Howard Crosby Warren Medal. At Princeton his private psychological library is housed in the Green Halls, which replaced Eno Hall as the home of psychology in 1963.