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Essays (Hardcover)
Wilhelm Max Wundt, Wilhelm Wundt
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R982
Discovery Miles 9 820
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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ETHICAL SYSTEMS HY WILHELM WUNDT SSOR Oh IHILOSOPHV JN TIIK
UNIVERMI V OK l Translate bg MARGARET FLOY WASHBURN t KOI E-SOK OF
ISYCHOIO V NI K I lltCS IN WKII. S COM kdll LONDON SWAN
SONNENSCHEIN CO., LIM. NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN CO. 1906 WUNDTS
ETHICS. VOL. I. INTRODUCTION THE FACTS OF THE MORAL LIFE. VOL. II.
ETHICAL SYSTEMS, Nov. 1897 Second Edition Feb. 1906. VOL. III. THE
PRINCIPLES OF MORALITY, AND THE SPHERE OF THEIR VALIDITY.
TRANSLATORS PREFACE HP HIS volume is a translation of the second
book of Professor Wundts Ethik, comprising pages 270-432 of the
second German edition. It forms a concise history of Ethics, which
apart from its intrinsic interest as a feature of Wundts ethical
system will serve to supplement Professor Sidgwicks Outlines by
reason of its more extended treatment of Continental schools. The
terminology of the first volume has been followed, and English
references are substituted for the German wherever possible.
Especial thanks are due to Professor E. K Titchener, of Cornell
University, for many helpful suggestions, and for a revision of the
proof. MARGARET FLOY WASHHURN. CONTENTS ZEbe Development of fl oral
Vbcorfe of tbe Vntocrsc CHAPTER I. The Beginnings of Ancient Ethii
s . l . 3 rf Prc-Socratic Ethics v . . 3 Socrates and the Socratic
Schools 5 Plato and Aristotle . . . 10 Platonic Ethics v T - . . 10
S b The Aristotelian Ethics . r7 3. The Stoics and Epicureans y . .
24 - a Stoic Ethics 7 - . p . 25 Epicurean Ethics . . ... 28 4
Transition to Christian Ethics - . . 31 CHAPTER II. CIini TIAN
ETHICS I. The General Basis of Christian Ethics . . 33 2 The System
of Augustine, and the Pelagian Controversy . 38 3 Scholastic Ethics
. . . . 41 4 The Fall ofScholasticism and the Ethics of the
Reformation . 4 S CHAPTER III. I. The Development ot Empirical
Ethics . . 53 a Bacon and Hobbes . . 53 b John Locke and the
Intellectualism of the Cambridge School . . . 59 Shaftesbury and
the English Ethics of the Under standing . . . ... 67 viii Contents
PAGE d David Hume and the Scotch Ethics of Feeling . . 73 e The
Ethics of French Materialism . 84 2. The Metaphysical Ethics of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries . . . ... 87 d Descartes and
Cartesianism . . 87 b Spinoza . . . ... 92 c Leibniz . . . ... 97 d
Wolff and the German Enlightenment . . .104 The Ethics of Kant and
of Speculative Idealism . . . 106 a Kant . . . . ... 106 b Fichte .
. . . . 119 c Hegel . . . ... 124 d Intermediary Tendencies between
Universalism and Indi vidualism . . . . . 127 4. Modern Realistic
Ethics . . . . 134 a Herbarts Practical Philosophy . . . 135 German
Naturalism and Materialism . . .139 c Utilitarianism and Positivism
in England and France . 142 d Utilitarian Ethics as Influenced by
the Theory of Evolution . . . . . 153 CHAPTER IV. GENERAL CRITICISM
OF ETHICAL SYSTEMS 1. Classification of Ethical Systems . . . . 160
a General Standpoints for such a Classification . .160 b
Classification according to motives. . . .161 c Classification
according to ends . . . 163 2. Authoritative Ethical Systems . . .
. 165 3. Eudaemonistic Systems . . . . 168 a Egoistic
Utilitarianism . . . . 168 b Altruistic Utilitarianism . . . . 171
5 Evolutionary Ethical Systems . . . . 186 a Individual
Evolutionism . . . . 186 b Universal Evolutionism . . . . . 187
INDEX OF NAMES . . . ... 191 INDEX OF SUBJECTS . . ., 193 VOL. II.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORAL THEORIES OF THE UNIVERSE. n.270-1 T
CHAPTER I. ANCIENT ETHICS. I. THE BEGINNINGS OF ANCIENT ETHICS. a
Pre-Socratic Rthics. HE earliest Greek speculation was ibujhc must,
. part cosmologicaL Hence it took little interest in ethical
questions. The sayings ascribed to the mythical or semi mythical
Seven Sages are crystallisations of popular morality, which cannot
be treated as the beginnings of a science. The earliest
philosophical schools, however, joined to their philo sophical
endeavours efforts, primarily reformatory, against the popular
religion...
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Ethical Systems
Wilhelm Wundt, W. Benett
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R842
Discovery Miles 8 420
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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ELEMENTS OF FOLK PSYCHOLOGY OUTLINES OF A PSYCHOLOGICAL HISTORY OF
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANKIND by WILHELM WUNDT. PREFACE: THE keen
interest which the present age is manifesting in problems connected
with the interpretation of human experience is no less a result
than it is a precondition of the fruitful labours of individual
scholars. Prominent among these is the distinguished author of the
volume which is herewith rendered accessible to English readers.
The impetus which Professor Wundt has given to the philosophical
and psychological studies of recent years is a matter of common
knowledge. Many of those who are contributing richly to these
fields of thought received their stimulus from instruction directly
enjoyed in the laboratory and the classrooms of Leipzig. But even
more than to Wundt, the teacher, is the world indebted to Wundt,
the investigator and the writer. The number and comprehensiveness
of this authors publications, as well as their range of subjects,
are little short of amazing. To gauge the extent of their influence
would require an examination of a large part of current
philosophical and psychological literature. No small measure of
this influence, however, must be credited to those whose labours
have made possible the appearance of Wundts writings in other
tongues. Of the English translations, we owe the first to
Professors Creighton and Titchener. Succeeding their translation of
the Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology came the publication,
in English, of the first volume of the 4t Principles of Physio
logical Psychology, of the two briefer treatises, Outlines of
Psychology and Introduction to Psychology 1 and, in the meantime,
of the valuable work on Ethics.Though Professor Wundt first won
recognition through his investigations in . physiology, it was his
later and more valuable contributions to physiological psychology,
as well as to logic, ethics, epistemology, and metaphysics, that
gained for him his place of eminence in the world of scholarship.
One may hazard the prophecy, however, that the final verdict of
history will ascribe to his latest studies those in folk
psychology, a significance not inferior to that which is now
generally conceded to the writings of his earlier years. The other
psychologie is a truly monumental work. The analysis and
interpretation of language, art, mythology, and religion, and the
criticisms of rival theories and points of view, which occupy, its
five largie volumes of over three thousand pages, are at once so
judicial and so suggestive that they may not be neglected by, any
serious student of the social mind. The publication of the
Vdlkerpsychotogie made necessary a number of defensive and
supplementary articles. Two of these, in a somewhat revised form,
together with an early article on The Aim and Methods of Folk
Psychology, and an additional essay on Pragmatic and Genetic
Psychology of Religion were published in 1911 under the title,
Problem der Vdtker, psychologie. Finally, in 1912, there appeared
the book which we are now presenting in translation, the Element
der Volkerpsychotogie. As regards to the difference in method and
character between the Element e and the Volker psychologie, nothing
need be added to what may, be gleaned from the authors Preface and
Introduction to this, his latest, work. Here, too, Professor Wundt
indicates his conception of the nature and the problem of folk
psychology, aFuller discussion of which may, be found both in the
VStkcrpsychologie and in the first essay of the Problemc He who
attempts to sketch the Outlines of tf Psychological History of the
Development of Mankind necessarily incurs a heavy indebtedness, as
regards to his material, to various more specialized sciences...
This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for
quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in
an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the
digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books
may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading
experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have
elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. This
text refers to the Bibliobazaar edition.
AN INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY by WILHELM WUNDT. Originally
published in 1911. AUTHORS PREFACE: IT is not the intention of this
introduction to psychology to discuss the scientific or philo
sophical conceptions of psychology, or even to make a survey of the
investigations and their results. What this little book attempts is
rather to introduce the reader to the prin cipal thoughts
underlying present-day experi mental psychology, leaving out many
facts and methods which would be necessary for a thorough study of
the subject. To omit all mention of experimental methods and their
results is at the present day impossible. Yet we only need to
consider a comparatively small number of results of the first
importance in order to comprehend the basal principles of the new
psychology. To characterise the methods of this psychology it would
be im possible to omit all reference to experiments, but we can and
will omit reference to the more or less complicated instruments on
which the carrying out of such experiments depends. I must refer
the reader who wishes a fuller account of the new psychology to my
Outlines of Psychology, which also contains the necessary
bibliography of the subject. W. WUNDT. LEIPBIC, June 1911.
TRANSLATORS NOTE: THE present volume is a popular introduction to
the Wundtian psychology. It is a shorter and simpler sketch than
the same authors Outlines of Psychology, and it should prove
invaluable to the English-speaking student who wishes to gain some
conception of the subject before entering upon a deeper study of
the same. Its popularity in Germany has been phenomenal. In
translating the work the translator has, as far as possible, used
the same English terms as those employedin the translations of
Wundt by Judd and Titchener. He is greatly indebted to Mr. Robert
Wilson, M. A., B. Sc., for his advice and help in reading over the
manuscript before going to press. RUDOLF PINTNEB. EDINBURGH, May
1912. Contents include: CHAPTER I CONSCIOUSNESS AND ATTENTION PA01
Psychology as a description of processes of conscious ness The
metronome The rhythmical disposi tion of consciousness The scope of
consciousness The threshold of consciousness The fixation point and
field of consciousness The focus of attention The scope of
attention Apprehen sion and apperception 1 CHAPTER II THE ELEMENTS
OF CONSCIOUSNESS Psychical elements and compounds Sensation and
idea Memory images and perceptions Quality and intensity of
sensations Feelings Difference between sensation and feeling The
three pairs of feelingsThe affective process Emotions and moods
Volitional processes Motives Instinc tive, voluntary, and
discriminative actions The qualities of feelings Feeling and
apperception . 43 ix X VAJJH JLJCJ1 XO CHAPTER III ASSOCIATION PAGE
Associations and apperceptions The fusion of tones into clangs
Spatial and temporal perception Assimilation and dissimilation
Direct and re produced forms of the same Complications The
recognition and cognition of objects Successive association The
so-called feeling of familiarity Secondary ideas The affective
processes in re cognition The so-called states of consciousness in
forgetting, remembering c...
It has been my object in the present work to investigate the
problems of ethics in the light of an examination of the facts of
moral life. One reason for this procedure is my desire to conduct
the reader by the same path that I myself have followed in
approaching ethical questions.
The present work aims to investigate the problems of ethics in the
light of an examination of the facts of moral life.
It has been the author's object in the present work to investigate
the problems of ethics in the light of an examination of the facts
of moral life. One reason for this procedure is my desire to
conduct the reader by the same path that the author has followed in
approaching ethical questions.
It has been my object in the present work to investigate the
problems of ethics in the light of an examination of the facts of
moral life. One reason for this procedure is my desire to conduct
the reader by the same path that I myself have followed in
approaching ethical questions.
The present work aims to investigate the problems of ethics in the
light of an examination of the facts of moral life.
It has been my object in the present work to investigate the
problems of ethics in the light of an examination of the facts of
moral life. One reason for this procedure is my desire to conduct
the reader by the same path that I myself have followed in
approaching ethical questions.
Wilhelm Wundt is known today as one of the founding figures of
modern psychology. The first person to ever call himself a
Psychologist, he is also widely regarded as the "father of
experimental psychology", having established the first laboratory
in the world dedicated to psychological research. This paved the
way for psychology as an independent field of study. A prolific
writer, this title contains 30 lectures on human and animal
psychology given in the latter half of the nineteenth century. This
edition was originally published in 1912, a translation of the
second German edition, the earlier edition being the first of the
author's works to be translated into English.
Wilhelm Wundt is known today as one of the founding figures of
modern psychology. The first person to ever call himself a
Psychologist, he is also widely regarded as the "father of
experimental psychology", having established the first laboratory
in the world dedicated to psychological research. This paved the
way for psychology as an independent field of study. A prolific
writer, this title contains 30 lectures on human and animal
psychology given in the latter half of the nineteenth century. This
edition was originally published in 1912, a translation of the
second German edition, the earlier edition being the first of the
author's works to be translated into English.
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