ABSTRACT
First published in 2002. Written in 1921 this is Volume II of the A History of Psychology series and looks at Mediaeval and Early Modern Period. The first period of the history of psychology was described in a volume published in 1912 under the title, History of Psychology: Ancient and Patristic. The volumes now published comprise (a) the mediaeval and early modern period, forming this (second) volume, and (b) the nineteenth century, forming a third volume. takes in areas of theology, scholarship and tradition and progress of Doctrines in the fifth and six centuries that form the background of Mediaeval thought to Mediaeval doctrines and beginning of mediaeval psychology in the thirteenth century, ranging to the literacy activity of the sixteenth century to the eighteenth century and the emergence of British, Continental and German psychologists.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |51 pages
The Background of Mediæval Thought
chapter |9 pages
The Influence of Theology
chapter |7 pages
Scholarship and Tradition
chapter |12 pages
Progress of Doctrines in the Fifth and Sixth Centuries
chapter |21 pages
The Arabian Teachers
part |110 pages
Mediæval Doctrines
chapter |17 pages
The Groundwork
chapter |18 pages
The Beginnings of Mediæval Psychology
chapter |18 pages
The Thirteenth Century
chapter |16 pages
From the Thirteenth to the Sixteenth Century
chapter |39 pages
The Sixteenth Century
part |77 pages
From the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century
chapter |18 pages
The Scientific Basis
chapter |21 pages
Systematic Thought: Descartes
chapter |29 pages
Systematic Thought—continued.
chapter |7 pages
Expansion of Psychology in the Seventeenth Century
part |128 pages
The Eighteenth Century