Principles Of Gestalt PsychologyRoutledge, 8. lis 2013. - Broj stranica: 732 Routledge 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 9
... turn it demands facts , and if they fail to conform exactly to it , then the theory is either wrong or incomplete . In this sense science is disci- pline . We cannot do what we want , but must do what the facts demand . The success of ...
... turn it demands facts , and if they fail to conform exactly to it , then the theory is either wrong or incomplete . In this sense science is disci- pline . We cannot do what we want , but must do what the facts demand . The success of ...
Stranica 12
... turn out to be perfectly valid . The hopeless error which the materialists committed was to make an arbitrary discrimination between these three concepts with regard to their scientific dignity . They accepted one and rejected the two ...
... turn out to be perfectly valid . The hopeless error which the materialists committed was to make an arbitrary discrimination between these three concepts with regard to their scientific dignity . They accepted one and rejected the two ...
Stranica 15
... turn to " order , " the concept derived from the sciences of life . Can we give a satisfactory definition of this con- cept ? We speak of an orderly arrangement of objects when every object is in a place which is determined by its ...
... turn to " order , " the concept derived from the sciences of life . Can we give a satisfactory definition of this con- cept ? We speak of an orderly arrangement of objects when every object is in a place which is determined by its ...
Stranica 17
... turn to the last of our categories : sig- nificance . What we mean by that is harder to explain than the two previous concepts , and yet here lies one of the deepest roots of gestalt theory , one which has been least openly brought ...
... turn to the last of our categories : sig- nificance . What we mean by that is harder to explain than the two previous concepts , and yet here lies one of the deepest roots of gestalt theory , one which has been least openly brought ...
Stranica 26
... turn set our limbs into motion and are activated by nervous impulses . It is very easy to pass from a statement like this to another : molar behaviour is a secondary phenomenon ; it is but the last outwardly observable result of a great ...
... turn set our limbs into motion and are activated by nervous impulses . It is very easy to pass from a statement like this to another : molar behaviour is a secondary phenomenon ; it is but the last outwardly observable result of a great ...
Sadržaj
3 | |
24 | |
69 | |
VISUAL ORGANIZATION | 106 |
FIGURE AND GROUND | 177 |
THE CONSTANCIES | 211 |
TRIDIMENSIONAL SPACE | 265 |
Reflexes THE EGO THE EXECUTIVE | 306 |
FOUNDATION OF A TRACE THEORY THEORETICAL | 423 |
MENTAL SECTION AND COMPLETION OF THE THEORY | 465 |
LEARNING AND OTHER MEMORY FUNCTIONSI | 529 |
LEARNING AND OTHER MEMORY FUNCTIONSII | 591 |
SOCIETY AND PERSONALITY | 648 |
CONCLUSION | 680 |
INDEX | 703 |
ADJUSTED BEHAVIOUR ATTITUDES EMOTIONS | 368 |
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