1 / 11

Wundt and the Founding of Psychology

Wundt and the Founding of Psychology. Wundt's Teachers. J. Müller : 1855 Wundt studied with him for a year in Berlin G. Fechner: 1887 left all his papers to Wundt. Wundt shared some of his broader interests W. Helmholtz: he was his assistant till 1864. While Wundt was Helmholtz's assistant.

swann
Télécharger la présentation

Wundt and the Founding of Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wundt and the Founding of Psychology Lucie Johnson

  2. Wundt's Teachers • J. Müller: 1855 Wundt studied with him for a year in Berlin • G. Fechner: 1887 left all his papers to Wundt. Wundt shared some of his broader interests • W. Helmholtz: he was his assistant till 1864. Lucie Johnson

  3. While Wundt was Helmholtz's assistant • 1862 Wundt writes his first book: Contribution to a Theory of Sense Perception • 1863 writes Lectures on the Minds of Men and Animals Lucie Johnson

  4. Wundt's Transitional Period (1865-1871) • Independent physiology tutor and associate faculty at Heidelberg • 1866-1869 elected to the Second Chamber of the Baden Parliament • 1867 he started to teach a course in physiological psychology. Lucie Johnson

  5. Academia before Leipzig • 1871 offered a regular faculty position at Heidelberg • 1873-74 publishes Physiological Psychology, a most important work. • 1874-75 Professor in Zurich Lucie Johnson

  6. At Leipzig • 1875 assumes a chair in Philosophy • 1876 starts teaching experimental psychology. • 1879 official beginning of lab • 1883 lab incorporated into the U. • 1897: lab becomes an a whole building • 1881 founds first journal in Psychology Lucie Johnson

  7. Some of Wundt's important Writings • Wundt's major work was the 20 volumes Völkerpsychologie (1900-1920) • The book in which he describes his model of the mind is the 1894 Outlines of Psychology • Extremely prolific writer: more than 50,000 pages Lucie Johnson

  8. Wundt's influence • Many students: supervised 116 psychology theses, and 70 philosophy theses • American students: James McKeen Cattell, Frank Angell , G. Stanley Hall, Edward Titchener and Lightner Whitmer • One woman student: Anna Berliner Lucie Johnson

  9. Titchener (1867-1927) • Was considered the "official carrier" of Wundt's influence to the US • Translated some of Wundt's work • Much more pragmatic and mechanistic than Wundt. Wundt's voluntarism becomes Titchener's structuralism. • Starts a group of Experimentalists in 1904 (no women allowed) Lucie Johnson

  10. Some Early Women Psychologists • Christine Ladd Franklin (1847-1930), studied under G.E. Müller in Gottingen • Margaret Floy Washburn (student of Titchener), founder of the Comparative Psychology field • Lucy May Boring (1886-1996), worked w/ her husband, a noted historian of psychology. Lucie Johnson

  11. THE END Lucie Johnson

More Related