ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1964, the story of the development of psychology in Great Britain had never been told. In the 1840s, when John Stuart Mill wrote about ‘Psychology’ in his treatise on Logic, the word was hardly known to the British public. Today the subject is taught in nearly every university, and psychologists are professionally employed by many public bodies.

The British contribution to the dramatic rise of psychology was an exceptionally important one, and had been shamefully neglected not only by the public but by British psychologists themselves. The tendency at the time to regard the subject through American spectacles distorted the role of British pioneers. Significant British contributions had been almost completely forgotten – those of Carpenter, Lewes, Spalding and Lubbock for example – and the work of men such as Hughlings Jackson and Romanes had been greatly undervalued. Not the least important feature of the book is its reassessment of the work of many individuals.

In relating the rise of psychology and its application to concomitant developments in medicine, physiology, biology, sociology, anthropology and statistics and to changes in the prevailing philosophic climate, the author shows psychology to be an integral part of the scientific, intellectual and social history of the past century.

chapter Chapter I|14 pages

Bain and his Background

chapter Chapter III|24 pages

Evolution and Psychology

chapter Chapter IV|13 pages

Galton and the Beginning of Psychometrics

chapter Chapter VI|19 pages

The Rise of Comparative Psychology

chapter Chapter VII|15 pages

The Foundations of Social Psychology

chapter Chapter VIII|12 pages

Changes in Philosophical Climate

chapter Chapter X|24 pages

Abnormal Psychology from 1875 to 1914

chapter Chapter XI|17 pages

Experimental and Institutional Beginnings

chapter Chapter XII|11 pages

William McDougall (1871–1938)

chapter Chapter XIII|12 pages

The London School

chapter Chapter XIV|37 pages

British Psychology between the Wars

chapter Chapter XV|53 pages

Applied Psychology

chapter |19 pages

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