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 6
SCIENCE AND THE SCIENCES Of course science never succeeds in reaching its goal. At any one moment in its history there is a wide gap between its ideal and its accomplishment. The system is never complete, there are ...
SCIENCE AND THE SCIENCES Of course science never succeeds in reaching its goal. At any one moment in its history there is a wide gap between its ideal and its accomplishment. The system is never complete, there are ...
Stranica 11
Anybody who would claim to have found a complete and true solution of our problems would expose himself to the just suspicion of being either an ass or a quack. These problems have occupied the best human minds for thousands of years, ...
Anybody who would claim to have found a complete and true solution of our problems would expose himself to the just suspicion of being either an ass or a quack. These problems have occupied the best human minds for thousands of years, ...
Stranica 19
A psychology which has no place for the concepts of meaning and value cannot be a complete psychology. At best it can give a sort of understructure, treating of the animal side of man, on which the main building, harbouring his cultural ...
A psychology which has no place for the concepts of meaning and value cannot be a complete psychology. At best it can give a sort of understructure, treating of the animal side of man, on which the main building, harbouring his cultural ...
Stranica 39
Just as I know my behavioural environment, so I know myself and my behaviour in this environment. Only if we include this knowledge with the behavioural environment have we gained a complete equivalent ...
Just as I know my behavioural environment, so I know myself and my behaviour in this environment. Only if we include this knowledge with the behavioural environment have we gained a complete equivalent ...
Stranica 42
Behaviour of the body, to complete the argument, means not only its motion with regard to the field, it refers equally to the changes which the body will undergo; e.g., a piece of iron will become magnetized in a magnetic field.
Behaviour of the body, to complete the argument, means not only its motion with regard to the field, it refers equally to the changes which the body will undergo; e.g., a piece of iron will become magnetized in a magnetic field.
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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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