REFERENCES FOR CLASS READING
- Münsterberg: Psychology, General and Applied, Chapter XXVII–XXXIII.
- Münsterberg: The Psychology of Industrial Efficiency.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF REFERENCES FOR CLASS READING
- Colvin, S. S., and Bagley, W. C.: Human Behavior. The Macmillan Company, 1913.
- Davenport, C. B.: Heredity in Relation to Eugenics. Henry Holt & Company, 1911.
- Dewey, J.: How We Think. D. C. Heath & Company, 1910.
- Kellicott, W. E.: The Social Direction of Human Evolution. D. Appleton & Company, 1911.
- Kirkpatrick, E. A.: The Fundamentals of Child Study. The Macmillan Company, 1912.
- Münsterberg, H.: Psychology, General and Applied. D. Appleton & Company, 1914.
- Münsterberg, H.: The Psychology of Industrial Efficiency. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1913.
- Pillsbury, W. B.: Essentials of Psychology. The Macmillan Company, 1916.
- Pyle, W. H.: Outlines of Educational Psychology. Warwick and York, 1912.
- Pyle, W. H.: The Examination of School Children. The Macmillan Company, 1913.
- Rowe, S. H.: Habit-Formation and the Science of Teaching. Longmans, Green, & Company, 1911.
- Titchener, E. B.: A Beginner’s Psychology. The Macmillan Company, 1916.
GLOSSARY
Most of the terms given below are explained in the text, but it is hoped
that this alphabetical list with brief definitions will prove helpful.
It is a difficult task to make the definitions scientific and at the
same time brief, simple, and clear.
- Abnormal.
- Having mental or physical characteristics widely different
from those commonly found in ordinary people.
- Acquired nature.
- Those aspects of habit, skill, knowledge, ideas, and
ideals that come from experience and are due to experience.
- Action.
- Muscular contractions usually producing motion of the body or
of some part of the body.
- Adaptation.
- Adjustment to one’s surroundings.
- Adaptive.
- Readily changing one’s responses and acquiring such new
responses as enable one to meet successfully new situations; also having
tendencies or characteristics which enable one to be readily adjustable.
- After-images.
- Images that follow immediately after stimulation of a
sense organ, and resulting from this stimulation.
- Association.
- Binding together ideas through experiencing them
together.
- Attention.
- Relative clearness of perceptions and ideas.
- Attitude.
- The tendency toward a particular type of response in action
or a particular idea or association in thought.
- Bond.
- The connection established in the nervous system which makes a
certain response follow a certain stimulus or a certain idea follow
another idea or perception.
- Capacity.
- The possibility of learning, achieving, etc.
- Color blindness.
- Inability to experience certain colors, usually red
and green.
- Complementary color.
- Complementary colors are those which, mixed in
the right proportion, produce gray.
- Congenital.
- Inborn.
- Connection.
- The nerve-path through which a stimulus produces a
response or through which one idea produces or evokes another.
- Conscious.
- Having consciousness, or accompanying consciousness or
producing consciousness.
- Consciousness.
- The mental states—perceptions, ideas, feelings—which
one has at any moment.
- Low level of consciousness.
- Conscious processes not so clear as
others existing at the same time.
- High level of consciousness.
- Conscious processes that are clear as
compared to others existing at the same time.
- Contrast.
- The enhancing or strengthening of a sensation by another of
opposite quality.
- Correlation.
- The relation that exists between two functions,
characteristics, or attributes that enables us, finding one, to predict
the presence of the other.
- Development.
- The appearance, or growth, or strengthening of a
characteristic.
- Emotion.
- The pleasure-pain aspect of experience plus sensations from
characteristic bodily reactions.
- Environment.
- The objects and forces about us which affect us through
our senses.
- Environmental instincts.
- Instincts which have originated, at least in
part, from the periodic changes in man’s environment.
- Eugenics.
- The science of race improvement through selective breeding
or proper marriages or in some cases through the prevention of marriage.
- Experience.
- What we learn of the world through sensation and
perception.
- Fatigue.
- Inability to work produced by work and which only rest will
cure.
- Feeble-minded.
- Having important mental traits only poorly developed or
not at all.
- Feeling.
- The pleasure-pain aspect of experience or of ideational
states.
- Function.
- The use of a thing or process, also any mental process or
combination of processes considered as a unit.
- Genetic.
- Having reference to origin and development.
- Habits.
- Definite responses to definite stimuli depending upon bonds
established by use after birth.
- Heredity.
- Transmission of characteristics from parent to offspring.
- Human nature.
- The characteristics and tendencies which we have as
human beings, with particular reference to mind and action.
- Ideals.
- Definite tendencies to act in definite ways. Ideas of definite
types of action with tendency toward the actions; ideas of definite
conditions, forms, and states together with a desire to experience or
possess them.
- Ideas.
- Revived perceptions.
- Images.
- Revived sensations, simpler than ideas.
- Imitation.
- Acting as we see others act.
- Impulse.
- Tendency to action.
- Individualistic instincts.
- Those instincts which more immediately
serve individual survival.
- Individual differences.
- The mental and physical differences between
people.
- Inherited nature.
- Those aspects of one’s nature due directly to
heredity.
- Instincts.
- Definite responses produced by definite stimuli through
hereditary connections in the nervous system.
- Intellectual habits.
- Definite fixed connections between ideas;
definite ways of meeting typical thought situations.
- Intensity.
- The amount or strength of a sensation or image, how far it
is from nothing.
- Interest.
- The aspect given to experience or thinking by attention and
pleasure.
- Learning.
- Establishing new bonds or connections in the nervous system;
acquiring habits; gaining knowledge.
- Memory.
- The retention of experience; retained and reproduced
experience.
- Mental set.
- Mental attitude or disposition.
- Mind.
- The sum total of one’s conscious states from birth to death.
- Nerve-path.
- The route traversed by a nerve-stimulus or excitation.
- Original nature.
- All those aspects of mind and body directly
inherited.
- Perceive.
- To be aware of a thing through sensation.
- Perception.
- Awareness of a thing through sensation or a fusion of
sensations.
- Plasticity.
- Modifiability, making easy the formation of new bonds or
nerve-connections.
- Presupposition.
- A theory or hypothesis on which an argument or a
system of arguments or principles is based.
- Primary.
- First, original, elementary, perceptive experience as
distinguished from ideational experience.
- Reaction.
- The action immediately following a stimulus and produced by
it.
- Reasoning.
- Thinking to a purpose; trying to meet a new situation.
- Reflex.
- A very simple act brought about by a stimulus through an
hereditary nerve-path.
- Response.
- The act following a stimulus and produced by it.
- Retention.
- Memory; modification of the nervous system making possible
the revival of experience.
- Science.
- Knowledge classified and systematized.
- Sensation.
- Primary experience; consciousness directly due to the
stimulation of a sense organ.
- Sense.
- To sense is to have sensation, to perceive. A sense is a sense
organ or the ability to have sensation through a sense organ.
- Sense organ.
- A modified nerve-end with accompanying apparatus or
mechanism making possible a certain form of stimulation.
- Sensitive.
- Capable of giving rise to sensation, or transmitting a
nerve-current.
- Sensitivity.
- Property of, or capacity for being sensitive.
- Sensory.
- Relating to a sense organ or to sensation.
- Situation.
- The total environmental influences of any one moment.
- Socialistic instincts.
- The instincts related more directly to the
survival of a social group.
- Stimulation.
- The setting up of a nerve process in a sense organ or in
a nerve tract.
- Stimulus.
- That which produces stimulation.
- Subnormal.
- Having characteristics considerably below the normal.
- Tendency.
- Probability of a nerve-current taking a certain direction
due to nerve-organization.
- Thinking.
- The passing of images and ideas.
- Thought.
- Thinking; an idea or group of ideas.
- Training.
- Establishing nerve connection or bonds.
- Vividness.
- Clearness of sensations, perceptions, images, and ideas.
INDEX
- Abilities, specialized, 179
- Ability, unusual, 206
- Adaptation of vision, 41
- After-images, visual, 40
- Ancestors, 22 f.
- Anger, 58
- Appearance of instincts, 54
- Applied psychology, 8–9, 210 ff.
- Association of ideas, 152
- Astigmatism, 44
- Attention, 80 ff.;
- Attitude, 157
- Behavior, 7
- Bodily conditions, 76
- Brain, 7
- Brightness, sensation of, 38
- Business, 215
- Causality, 18, 21
- Centrally initiated action, 51
- Child, nature of, 11
- Cold, sense of, 42
- Collecting instinct, 62
- College, function of, 217
- Color blindness, 45
- Color mixture, 39
- Color, sensation of, 38
- Completion test, 198
- Concentrated practice, 102
- Consciousness, 7
- Conservatism, 109
- Costly Temper test, 186
- Cramming, 141
- Criminal, the, 213 f.
- Curriculum, 145
- Darwin, 89
- Defects of sense organs, 43
- Development, individual, 24 ff.;
- racial, 18–21;
- significance of and causality, 21–24
- Direct method, 112
- Dizziness, organs that give us sense of, 42
- Dramatization, 67
- Drill in school subjects, 110–112
- Dynamic, world as, 20
- Economical practice, 101 ff.
- Education, 210;
- aim of, 10;
- preparatory, 167;
- science of, 9 ff.
- Educational inferences, 143
- Educational psychology, 9 ff.
- Efficiency, 98, 108
- Emotions, 74 ff.
- Environment, 31
- Environmental instincts, 61
- Envy, 58
- Evolution, 19 ff.
- Exceptions, 101, 114
- Excursions, 61
- Experience, 8;
- Experiment, 13 ff.
- Eye, the, 37
- Eye defects, 43 ff.
- Eyestrain, 20
- Farsightedness, 44
- Fatigue, 101
- Fear, 56
- Feeble-mindedness, 29
- Feeling, 73 ff.
- Fighting instincts, 58
- Formal drill, III, 112
- Free association frequency surface, 178
- Free association test, 193
- Frequency of experience, 156
- Gang instinct, 60
- Genetic view of childhood, 24
- Genius, 31
- Habit, 87 ff.;
- and nerve path, 91;
- how formed, 98 ff.;
- importance in life, 107;
- intellectual, 89;
- moral, 90;
- of thought, 169;
- results of, 94;
- specific, 116
- Hearing, 41;
- Heredity, 24 ff.
- Heredity vs. Environment, 31
- Heritage, social, 23
- High school and fourth grade abilities compared, 203
- High school, function of, 217
- Home and moral training, 118
- Idea, 52
- Ideas, 124
- Imitation, 64 ff.
- Imitation in ideals, 67
- Incidental drill, 111
- Individual development, 24 ff.
- Individual differences, 176 ff.
- Individualistic instincts, 56
- Industry, 216
- Influencing men, 215
- Inheritance, 22
- Inherited tendencies, 50 ff.
- Initiative, 113
- Instincts, 52 ff.;
- classification of, 55;
- significance of, 55
- Interest, 84
- Intervals between practice, 102
- Jealousy, 58
- Joints, sense organs in, 42
- Jost’s law, 142
- Language and thinking, 170 ff.
- Language study, 144
- Latin, 116
- Law, service of psychology to, 212
- Learning and remembering, 138
- Learning by wholes, 141
- Life occupations, 205
- Logical memory, 184 ff.
- Meaning, 163 ff.
- Medicine, 211
- Memories, kinds of, 132
- Memory, 124 ff.;
- and age and sex, 127;
- and habit, 146;
- and school standing, 135;
- and thinking, 134;
- factors of, 128 ff.;
- good, dangers resulting from, 137;
- kinds of, 132
- Mendelian principle, 26
- Mental development, 19
- Mental differences, 178;
- detection of, 180;
- importance of, 201 ff.
- Mental functions developed, 182
- Mental set, 157
- Mental tests, 183 ff.
- Mind and body, 34 ff.
- Mood, 78
- Moral training, 117 ff.
- Motive, 77
- Muscular speed, 14
- Museum, school, 62 ff.
- Musical ability, 179
- Nearsightedness, 44
- Needs of child, 77
- Nerve tendency, 92
- Norms in mental tests, 184 ff.
- Occupations, 205
- Opposites test, 195 ff.
- Organization of experience, 163 ff.
- Pain sense, 42
- Parents, and habit-formation of children, 104 ff., 119
- Perception, 124
- Physiological basis of memory, 126
- Piano playing, 51, 97
- Pitch, 41
- Plasticity, 93
- Play, 68
- Pleasure and habit, 101
- Pleasure, higher forms of, 80
- Practice, 99, 113
- Primary experience, 154
- Psychology and culture, 218
- Psychology defined, 5;
- method of, 13;
- problems of, 8
Race, development of, 18 ff.;
- Ranking students, 15
- Reasoning, 159; training in, 168
- Recalling forgotten names, 146
- Recency of experience, 155
- Regeneration, 23
- Repetition, 99
- Respect for authority, 77
- Resemblance, 25
- Retina, the, 37 f.
- Revived experience, 125
- Rigidity, 108
- Rote memory, 189
- Rules for habit-formation, 113
- Salesmanship, 215
- School, and habit, 108;
- and moral training, 119 f.
- Schoolhouse, community center, 60 f.
- Science, 1
- Scientific law, 3
- Scientist, 1 ff.
- Securing efficiency, 218
- Selecting habits, 109
- Sense organs, affects of stimulating, 6, 7;
- Sleight’s experiment, 140
- Smell, 42
- Social life of children, 60
- Social tendencies, 59
- Stimulation, 6
- Stimulus and response, 50
- Study, learning how to, 132
- Subnormal children, 206
- Substitution test, 192
- Taste, 42
- Teacher, function of in memory work, 142;
- function of in habit-formation, 103
- Teaching too abstract, 129
- Temperament, 78
- Tendons, sense organs in, 42
- Thinking, 152 ff., 159
- Touch, 42
- Transfer of training, 114 ff., 140
- Truancies, 61
- Typewriting, 51, 94 ff.
- Vision, 37; importance of, 45
- Visual contrast, 39
- Vividness and intensity of experience, 156
- Wandering, 61
- Warmth, sense of, 42
- Weight, diagram showing frequency surface of, 177
- Word-building test, 197
- Work and psychology, 218