Principles Of Gestalt PsychologyRoutledge is now re-issuing this prestigious series of 204 volumes originally published between 1910 and 1965. The titles include works by key figures such asC.G. Jung, Sigmund Freud, Jean Piaget, Otto Rank, James Hillman, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney and Susan Isaacs. Each volume is available on its own, as part of a themed mini-set, or as part of a specially-priced 204-volume set. A brochure listing each title in the "International Library of Psychology" series is available upon request. |
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Stranica ix
My treatment, long as it has become, leaves out a great number of facts, many of them surely of great significance. But some selection there had to be, and although every selection is to some extent arbitrary and depending upon the ...
My treatment, long as it has become, leaves out a great number of facts, many of them surely of great significance. But some selection there had to be, and although every selection is to some extent arbitrary and depending upon the ...
Stranica 5
Only when psychology determined to become a fact-finding science did it begin to become a real science. From the state in which it knew little and fancied a great deal it has progressed to a state where it knows a lot and fancies ...
Only when psychology determined to become a fact-finding science did it begin to become a real science. From the state in which it knew little and fancied a great deal it has progressed to a state where it knows a lot and fancies ...
Stranica 8
Instead I believe that science, aware of its incompleteness, should gradually attempt to broaden its base, to include more and more of the facts which it found at first necessary to exclude, and thereby become better and better equipped ...
Instead I believe that science, aware of its incompleteness, should gradually attempt to broaden its base, to include more and more of the facts which it found at first necessary to exclude, and thereby become better and better equipped ...
Stranica 19
Not only did psychology exhaust its efforts in trivial investigations, not only had it become stagnant with regard to the problems it actually worked on, but it insisted on its claim that it held the only key to those problems which the ...
Not only did psychology exhaust its efforts in trivial investigations, not only had it become stagnant with regard to the problems it actually worked on, but it insisted on its claim that it held the only key to those problems which the ...
Stranica 22
... but at the same time the aspect of meaning becomes more manifest here than in any other part of the universe. ... to become a professional psychologist, one might even doubt the advisability of training professional psychologists.
... but at the same time the aspect of meaning becomes more manifest here than in any other part of the universe. ... to become a professional psychologist, one might even doubt the advisability of training professional psychologists.
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Sadržaj
3 | |
24 | |
THE PROBLEM REFUTATION OF FALSE SOLUTIONS GENERAL FORMULATION OF THE TRUE SOLUTION | 69 |
VISUAL ORGANIZATION AND ITS LAWS | 106 |
FIGURE AND GROUND THE FRAMEWORK | 177 |
THE CONSTANCIES | 211 |
TRIDIMENSIONAL SPACE AND MOTION | 265 |
REFLEXES THE EGO THE EXECUTIVE | 306 |
FOUNDATION OF A TRACE THEORY THEORETICAL SECTION | 423 |
FOUNDATION OF A TRACE THEORY EXPERIMENTAL SECTION AND COMPLETION OF THE THEORY | 465 |
XII LEARNING AND OTHER MEMORY FUNCTIONSI | 529 |
XIII LEARNING AND OTHER MEMORY FUNCTIONSII | 591 |
XIV SOCIETY AND PERSONALITY | 648 |
XV CONCLUSION | 680 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 687 |
INDEX | 703 |
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