Edwin Garrigues Boring citations

Edwin Garrigues Boring, né le 23 octobre 1886 à Philadelphie et mort le 1er juillet 1968 à Cambridge , est un psychologue américain. Il est notamment connu pour ses travaux d'histoire de la psychologie et a publié plusieurs ouvrages qui ont longtemps fait référence :



E. G. Boring, Sensation and perception in the history of experimental psychology, Appleton-Century-Crofts, New York, 1942.

E. G. Boring, A history of experimental psychology, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs , 1950, 2e éd. Wikipedia  

✵ 23. octobre 1886 – 1. juillet 1968
Edwin Garrigues Boring photo
Edwin Garrigues Boring: 20   citations 0   J'aime

Edwin Garrigues Boring: Citations en anglais

“The gift of professional maturity comes only to the psychologist who knows the history of his science.”

Cited in: David Ballin Klein (1977) The Unconscious: Invention Or Discovery? p. iii;
A History of Experimental Psychology, 1929

“Psychologically attention is drainage, whatever it may be physiologically.”

p, 642
A History of Experimental Psychology, 1929

“[William James, in the 1890s] began that metamorphosis of German psychology which was to alter the Teutonic worm of sensory content into the American butterfly of functional reality.”

Source: A History of Experimental Psychology, 1929, p. 740; As cited in: John Nisbet, "How it all began: educational research 1880-1930." Scottish Educational Review 31 (1999): 3-9.

“Introspectionism got its ism because the protesting new schools needed a clear and stable contrasting background against which to exhibit their novel features. No proponent of introspection a the basic method of psychology ever called himself an introspectionist.”

Source: "A history of introspection." 1953, p. 172 ; Cited in: Kurt Danziger, "The history of introspection reconsidered." Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 16.3 (1980): 241-262.

“So far as consciousness goes, one does one's thinking before one knows what he is to think about.”

Source: A History of Experimental Psychology, 1929, p. 397: Cited in: Jay M. Jackson (2013) Social Psychology, Past and Present: An Integrative Orientation, p. 28