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Includes Jung's famous word-association studies in normal and abnormal psychology, two lectures on the association method given in 1909 at Clark University, and three articles on psychophysical researches from American and English journals in 1907 and 1908.
Association of ideas --- Psychophysics --- Psychoanalysis --- Association of ideas. --- Psychophysics. --- Psychoanalysis. --- Adjective. --- Alcoholism. --- Amplitude. --- Analogy. --- Analytical psychology. --- Anxiety. --- Assonance. --- Bibliography. --- Calculation. --- Catatonia. --- Causality. --- Chronograph. --- Clark University. --- Complex (psychology). --- Computation. --- Consciousness. --- Consideration. --- Criminal psychology. --- Culprit. --- Dementia praecox. --- Dementia. --- Disease. --- Distraction. --- Electrode. --- Embarrassment. --- Epilepsy. --- Eugen Bleuler. --- Exhaustion. --- Experiment. --- Experimental psychology. --- Explanation. --- Feeling. --- Forgetting. --- Galvanometer. --- Hallucination. --- Hans Gross. --- Holograph. --- Hypnosis. --- Hysteria. --- Idiot. --- Imbecile. --- Implicit-association test. --- Indication (medicine). --- Intellectual disability. --- Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious. --- Journal of Abnormal Psychology. --- Laughter. --- Lecture. --- Length. --- Masturbation. --- Measurement. --- Mental disorder. --- Neurosis. --- Newspaper. --- Nickname. --- Noun. --- Observation. --- Obstacle. --- Paralysis. --- Percentage. --- Perseveration. --- Phenomenon. --- Phrase. --- Physician. --- Physiological psychology. --- Pity. --- Pleonasm. --- Prevalence. --- Probability. --- Proportion (architecture). --- Psychiatrist. --- Psychiatry. --- Psychological testing. --- Psychologist. --- Psychology. --- Psychopathology. --- Publication. --- Quantity. --- Reminiscence. --- Result. --- Sexual intercourse. --- Standard German. --- Stimulation. --- Stupidity. --- Stupor. --- Suffering. --- Suggestion. --- Symbols of Transformation. --- Symptom. --- The Erotic. --- The Psychopathology of Everyday Life. --- Theft. --- Thought. --- Transference. --- Value judgment. --- Verb. --- Wilhelm Wundt. --- Word Association. --- Writing.
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Jung's lectures on the history of psychology-in English for the first timeBetween 1933 and 1941, C. G. Jung delivered a series of public lectures at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich. Intended for a general audience, these lectures addressed a broad range of topics, from dream analysis to yoga and meditation. Here for the first time in English are Jung's lectures on the history of modern psychology from the Enlightenment to his own time, delivered in the fall and winter of 1933-34.In these inaugural lectures, Jung emphasizes the development of concepts of the unconscious and offers a comparative study of movements in French, German, British, and American thought. He also gives detailed analyses of Justinus Kerner's The Seeress of Prevorst and Théodore Flournoy's From India to the Planet Mars. These lectures present the history of psychology from the perspective of one of the field's most legendary figures. They provide a unique opportunity to encounter Jung speaking for specialists and nonspecialists alike and are the primary source for understanding his late work.Featuring cross-references to the Jung canon and explanations of concepts and terminology, History of Modern Psychology painstakingly reconstructs and translates these lectures from manuscripts, summaries, and recently recovered shorthand notes of attendees. It is the first volume of a series that will make the ETH lectures available in their entirety to English readers.
Psychoanalysis. --- Psychology --- Psychology, Pathological --- Jungian psychology. --- PSYCHOLOGY / Movements / Jungian. --- History. --- Age of Enlightenment. --- Analogy. --- Analytical psychology. --- Archimedean point. --- Arthur Schopenhauer. --- Asceticism. --- Astrology. --- Autosuggestion. --- Barbara Hannah. --- Career. --- Carl Jung. --- Causality. --- Clairvoyance. --- Clark University. --- Concept. --- Consciousness. --- Criticism. --- Critique of Pure Reason. --- Cryptomnesia. --- Disposition. --- Dream interpretation. --- ETH Zurich. --- Editorial. --- Eduard von Hartmann. --- Empirical psychology. --- Eranos. --- Eugen Bleuler. --- Existence. --- Experimental psychology. --- Explanation. --- Extrasensory perception. --- Extraversion and introversion. --- Feeling. --- German idealism. --- Henri Bergson. --- Hermann von Helmholtz. --- Historiography. --- Hypnosis. --- Immanuel Kant. --- Indication (medicine). --- Individuation. --- Inferiority complex. --- Instance (computer science). --- Intellect. --- Jacob Burckhardt. --- Jolande Jacobi. --- Joseph Priestley. --- Lecture. --- Lecturer. --- Literature. --- Marie-Louise von Franz. --- Materialism. --- Mental disorder. --- Methodology. --- Natural science. --- Neurosis. --- Parapsychology. --- Personalism. --- Phenomenon. --- Philemon Foundation. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy. --- Physician. --- Pierre Janet. --- Precognition. --- Psyche (psychology). --- Psychiatry. --- Psychic. --- Psychological Types. --- Psychologist. --- Psychology and Alchemy. --- Psychology of the Unconscious. --- Psychology. --- Psychotherapy. --- Publication. --- Reality. --- Reason. --- Religion. --- Rudolf Steiner. --- Sanskrit. --- Science. --- Scientist. --- Self-consciousness. --- Seminar. --- Sensualism. --- Shorthand. --- Sigmund Freud. --- Sonu Shamdasani. --- Subjectivism. --- Symptom. --- Theory. --- Theosophy. --- Thought. --- Treatise. --- Upanishads. --- Victor Hugo. --- Wilhelm Wundt. --- Wolfgang Pauli. --- Writing. --- Analytic psychology --- Analytical psychology --- Jungian psychoanalysis --- Jungian theory --- Psychoanalysis
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"This book is an ethnographic investigation of the everyday professional lives of experimental cognitive psychologists, aimed at conveying to readers a sense of the social world of thelaboratory, and explaining how the field produces knowledge about human cognition. Emily Martin did fieldwork in three labs conducting research in normal human cognition. In the early daysof her fieldwork, Martin was struck by how irrelevant her own subjective experience was to the experimenters. What researchers conducting the experiments were seeking was data about how her brain responded to stimuli such as photographs and videos. Her own responses to the situation -- the set-up of the experiment, etc -- were very much beside the point. This led Martin to wonder when, in the history of this field, introspection and related "messy" data concerning the social conditions of lab experimentation came to be expelled. Her book examines this history, provides a comparison with the history of her own field (anthropology), and discusses the evolution of a pillar of contemporary experimental cognitive psychology, the psychological experiment. In the course of this book Martin reports on her discussions with practicing experimental psychologists about the efficacy of placing persons in such unusual settings in the search for generalknowledge. What emerges is an account of the cognitive psychology experiment as an artificial construction in which a certain kind of knowledge is produced and a certain kind of humansubject is created. But this book is not a "debunking" of the discipline of experimental cognitive psychology. Martin readily acknowledges the fact that real knowledge is produced in thesehighly-structured and artificial experimental settings. She does, however, question the tendency within this discipline to dismiss the significance of the social and cultural setting of the formalpsychological experiment, and argues that the field promotes a truncated view of the human subject and its capacities"--
Psychology --- Psychology, Experimental. --- Human experimentation in psychology. --- Experimental psychologists. --- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social. --- Cognitive psychology --- Experiments. --- Experimental psychology --- Experimental psychologists --- Psychological experiments --- Psychology, Experimental --- Psychology, Cognitive --- Cognitive science --- Experimentation on humans, Psychological --- Psychological experimentation on humans --- Psychologists, Experimental --- Psychological research personnel --- Psychologists --- Research --- Experiments --- Psychology - Experiments --- Cognitive psychology - Experiments --- Human experimentation in psychology --- Cognitive psychology. --- Abstraction. --- Analogy. --- Anthropologist. --- Anthropology. --- Basic science (psychology). --- Behavior. --- Behaviorism. --- Behavioural sciences. --- Calculation. --- Causality. --- Coaching. --- Cognition. --- Cognitive science. --- Collaboration. --- Consciousness. --- Conspiracy theory. --- Control room. --- Cross-cultural psychology. --- Cultural practice. --- Decision-making. --- Digital media. --- Electroencephalography. --- Experiment. --- Experimental data. --- Experimental psychology. --- Face perception. --- Folk psychology. --- Functional magnetic resonance imaging. --- Funding of science. --- Gestalt psychology. --- Hallucination. --- Heuristic. --- How the Mind Works. --- Human subject research. --- Idealization. --- Ideology. --- Imagination. --- Information seeking. --- Interrogation. --- Introspection. --- Laboratory Life. --- Language game. --- Lecture. --- Machine learning. --- Mental disorder. --- Mental representation. --- Microcomputer. --- Minds. --- Mood (psychology). --- Natural experiment. --- Neuropsychology. --- Neuroscientist. --- Objectivity (science). --- Observation. --- Opportunism. --- Organizing (management). --- Parapsychology. --- Perceptual psychology. --- Personality quiz. --- Persuasive technology. --- Pragmatism. --- Prediction. --- Product manager. --- Psyche (psychology). --- Psychic. --- Psychological Science. --- Psychological manipulation. --- Psychological research. --- Psychological testing. --- Psychologist. --- Psychology. --- Psychopathology. --- Qualia. --- Qualitative research. --- Questionnaire. --- Quiz. --- Replication crisis. --- Research assistant. --- Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming). --- Science project. --- Science. --- Scientific method. --- Scientist. --- Scrutiny. --- Self-report study. --- Social psychology. --- Software. --- Spiritualism. --- Stanford prison experiment. --- Stimulation. --- Subjectivity. --- Technology. --- Test theory. --- Theory of mind. --- Thought. --- User experience design. --- Valence (psychology). --- Vulnerability (computing). --- Wilhelm Wundt.
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