Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/000849028/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b1377202.
- catalog created "1977.".
- catalog date "1977".
- catalog date "1977.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1977.".
- catalog description "1. Objectivity and methodological transposition -- 2. The observer and the facts -- 3. Pure phenomenology and phenomenological psychology -- 4. Some basic propositions -- 5. Misinterpretations of phenomenology -- 6. Main topics of this book -- Introduction -- 1. Technical knowledge v. individual experience -- 2. The embodiment -- 3. Dualism and its consequences -- 4. The a priori in the epistemological framework -- Chapter 1: Biology and Culture in Objective Psychology -- 1. The historical perspective and the a priori -- 2. Objectivity as a construct -- 3. The abandonment of subjectivity -- 4. The cultural origin of psychological concepts -- 5. Reductionism and intuitive biology -- 6. Clinical cases and scientific phenomena -- 7. Subjectivity v. subjectivism -- 8. The time-perspective in psychology -- Chapter 2: The Development of Phenomenology -- 1. Empirical and experimental psychology -- 2. Franz Brentano: the founding intentionality -- 3. The meaning of experience -- ".
- catalog description "3. Striving towards the 'concrete' -- 4. The postulate of conventional meaning 5. Psychoanalysis and the concrete subject -- 6. An epistemological appraisal of concrete psychology -- 7. Epistemology and ideology -- Chapter 5: Phenomenological Psychology and the Biological Standpoint -- 1. The life-world -- 2. Husserl's first characterisation of phenomenological psychology -- 3. Further Husserlian analyses of phenomenological psychology -- 4. The problem of 'foreign subjectivity' -- 5. The historical nature of man's life-world -- 6. The dual meaning of phenomenological psychology -- 7. Reduction and the scientific standpoint -- Chapter 6: Phenomenological Psychology in Actual Practice -- 1. The methodological problem -- 2. Phenomenological experimental psychology -- 3. Stumpf's acoustical and musical investigations -- 4. The experimental phenomenology of David Katz -- 5. Michotte's conception of experimental phenomenology -- 6. The anthropological physiology of Buytendijk -- ".
- catalog description "4. Phenomenal existence -- 5. The description of psychic phenomena -- 6. The positivism of Ernst Mach -- 7. Form qualities and object theory -- 8. Stumpf's experimental phenomenology -- 9. James Ward's system of Act psychology -- 10. Husserl's influence on Gestalt psychology -- 11. Numbers and Structures -- 12. Gestalt psychology reconsidered -- 13. The phenomenological v. the biological standpoint -- Chapter 3: The Physiology of the Behavioural Field -- 1. Sherrington: the founding of the biology of behaviour -- 2. Central nervous integration -- 3. The anatomical basis of behaviour structures -- 4. Distance-receptors and precurrent reactions -- 5. Subjective space-time -- 6. The body as part of the exteroceptive field -- 7. Perceptual structures from the evolutionary perspective -- 8. Sherrington's teachings and the phenomenological standpoint -- Chapter 4: Philosophical and Psychological Realism -- 1. A critical analysis of classical psychology -- 2. The myth of substantialism -- ".
- catalog description "7. Intersubjectivity as an ethological problem -- 8. Subjective phenomena as seen by ethologists -- Concluding Remarks.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [155]-168.".
- catalog extent "174 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0041210182 :".
- catalog isPartOf "Advances in psychology series".
- catalog issued "1977".
- catalog issued "1977.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "London ; Boston : G. Allen & Unwin,".
- catalog subject "BF181 .T45".
- catalog subject "Phenomenological psychology.".
- catalog subject "Psychology Philosophy.".
- catalog subject "Psychology and philosophy.".
- catalog subject "Psychology, Experimental.".
- catalog subject "W499".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Objectivity and methodological transposition -- 2. The observer and the facts -- 3. Pure phenomenology and phenomenological psychology -- 4. Some basic propositions -- 5. Misinterpretations of phenomenology -- 6. Main topics of this book -- Introduction -- 1. Technical knowledge v. individual experience -- 2. The embodiment -- 3. Dualism and its consequences -- 4. The a priori in the epistemological framework -- Chapter 1: Biology and Culture in Objective Psychology -- 1. The historical perspective and the a priori -- 2. Objectivity as a construct -- 3. The abandonment of subjectivity -- 4. The cultural origin of psychological concepts -- 5. Reductionism and intuitive biology -- 6. Clinical cases and scientific phenomena -- 7. Subjectivity v. subjectivism -- 8. The time-perspective in psychology -- Chapter 2: The Development of Phenomenology -- 1. Empirical and experimental psychology -- 2. Franz Brentano: the founding intentionality -- 3. The meaning of experience -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "3. Striving towards the 'concrete' -- 4. The postulate of conventional meaning 5. Psychoanalysis and the concrete subject -- 6. An epistemological appraisal of concrete psychology -- 7. Epistemology and ideology -- Chapter 5: Phenomenological Psychology and the Biological Standpoint -- 1. The life-world -- 2. Husserl's first characterisation of phenomenological psychology -- 3. Further Husserlian analyses of phenomenological psychology -- 4. The problem of 'foreign subjectivity' -- 5. The historical nature of man's life-world -- 6. The dual meaning of phenomenological psychology -- 7. Reduction and the scientific standpoint -- Chapter 6: Phenomenological Psychology in Actual Practice -- 1. The methodological problem -- 2. Phenomenological experimental psychology -- 3. Stumpf's acoustical and musical investigations -- 4. The experimental phenomenology of David Katz -- 5. Michotte's conception of experimental phenomenology -- 6. The anthropological physiology of Buytendijk -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "4. Phenomenal existence -- 5. The description of psychic phenomena -- 6. The positivism of Ernst Mach -- 7. Form qualities and object theory -- 8. Stumpf's experimental phenomenology -- 9. James Ward's system of Act psychology -- 10. Husserl's influence on Gestalt psychology -- 11. Numbers and Structures -- 12. Gestalt psychology reconsidered -- 13. The phenomenological v. the biological standpoint -- Chapter 3: The Physiology of the Behavioural Field -- 1. Sherrington: the founding of the biology of behaviour -- 2. Central nervous integration -- 3. The anatomical basis of behaviour structures -- 4. Distance-receptors and precurrent reactions -- 5. Subjective space-time -- 6. The body as part of the exteroceptive field -- 7. Perceptual structures from the evolutionary perspective -- 8. Sherrington's teachings and the phenomenological standpoint -- Chapter 4: Philosophical and Psychological Realism -- 1. A critical analysis of classical psychology -- 2. The myth of substantialism -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "7. Intersubjectivity as an ethological problem -- 8. Subjective phenomena as seen by ethologists -- Concluding Remarks.".
- catalog title "Phenomenology and the science of behaviour : an historical and epistemological approach / Georges Thinès.".
- catalog type "text".