This book enables the reader to trace developments in the philosophy and history of psychology. It provides a broad treatment of the main conceptual issues in psychology, explaining what the problems are, outlining the main approaches taken to them, and indicating their relative merits and demerits.
Recenzijas
At first glance the volume Philosophy and History of Psychology by Elizabeth Valentine may look like just another collection of papers by a recently retired academic. In fact it is much more. It is a well-chosen selection from the work of someone who, against the pressures of her time, worked to keep open the bridge between philosophy and psychology by her research and by founding the History and Philosophy of Psychology section of the British Psychological Society and its journal. She was able to do so by being unusually well read in the recent history of both philosophy and psychology, as well as being able to contribute significantly to contemporary research in both subjects. Moreover these essays reflect her passion to make known the neglected work of early women psychologists in Britain such as Beatrice Edgell, Nellie Carey and Jessie Murray. Thus this volume is also a portrait of a person of wide intellectual sympathies and generous academic impulses who deserves to be much better known. - William Lyons, Emeritus Fellow of Trinity College Dublin and Member of the Royal Irish Academy, Ireland
Liz Valentine has been at the centre of activities in Philosophy and History of Psychology in Britain for over 30 years, and it is great boon to see so many of her key papers gathered together in this book. They show the remarkable range of her interests, from scholarly accounts of individual psychologists to lucid and provocative chapters on consciousness and the philosophy of cognitive science. - Arthur Still, Counsellor and Psychotherapist, Edinburgh, UK
Paer I: Philosophy
1. Philosophy and psychology
2. Psychology as science
3. Folk psychology and its implications for cognitive science: discussion
4.
Introspection
5. The possibility of a science of experience: an examination
of some conceptual problems facing the study of consciousness
6. Dissociation
and the delimitation of consciousness: implications of neuropsychological
phenomena for philosophical conceptions of consciousness
7. Perception and
action in East and West
8. Metaphysics
9. Mind-body problems: distinguishing
the soluble from the insoluble
10. Explanation
11. Reduction Part II: From
philosophy to history
12. Neural nets: from Hartley and Hebb to Hinton
13. G.
F. Stouts philosophical psychology
14. Biographical introduction to James
Sullys Studies of Childhood Part III: History
15. Psychology at Bedford
College London 18491985
16. Measuring the mind: Beatrice Edgell, pioneer
woman psychologist of Bedford College
17. The founding of the Psychological
Laboratory, University College London: Dear Galton . . . Yours truly, J
Sully
18. Spooks and spoofs: relations between psychical research and
academic psychology in Britain in the inter-war period
19. To care or to
understand? Women members of the British Psychological Society 19011918
20.
The other woman
21. A brilliant and many-sided personality: Jessie Margaret
Murray, founder of the Medico-Psychological Clinic
Elizabeth R. Valentine is Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Royal Holloway, University of London and Honorary Senior Research Associate at University College London, UK. Best known as the author of Conceptual Issues in Psychology, she has published many papers on theoretical psychology and experimental psychology. She is a founder member and former chair of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society, and the founding editor of its periodical, History & Philosophy of Psychology.