Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) German physician, physiologist, philosopher and professor
Source: An Introduction to Psychology (1912), p. 16
Source: The Foundations of Normal and Abnormal Psychology (1914), p. 117
Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) German physician, physiologist, philosopher and professor
Source: An Introduction to Psychology (1912), p. 16
Boris Sidis (1867–1923) American psychiatrist
Source: The Foundations of Normal and Abnormal Psychology (1914), p. 39
Jane Roberts (1929–1984) American Writer
Source: Seth, Dreams & Projections of Consciousness, (1986), p. 159, quoting from Seth Session 26
J. Howard Moore (1862–1916)
Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), Egoism and Altruism, pp. 117–118
Sam Harris (1967) American author, philosopher and neuroscientist
Sam Harris, Drugs and the Meaning of Life http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/drugs-and-the-meaning-of-life/ (5 July 2011) <nowiki>[audio version https://soundcloud.com/samharrisorg/drugs-and-the-meaning-of-life</nowiki>] <br class="br">2010s <br class="br">Context: The “war on drugs” has been well lost, and should never have been waged. While it isn’t explicitly protected by the U. S. Constitution, I can think of no political right more fundamental than the right to peacefully steward the contents of one’s own consciousness. The fact that we pointlessly ruin the lives of nonviolent drug users by incarcerating them, at enormous expense, constitutes one of the great moral failures of our time.
Kim Stanley Robinson book Green Mars
His listeners nodded unhappily.
“So everything is expanding. But it can’t happen in contradiction to the law of conservation of matter-energy. No matter how efficient your throughput is, you can’t get an output larger than the input.”
Source: Green Mars (1993), Chapter 2, “The Ambassador” (pp. 76-77)
Gordon Pask (1928–1996) British psychologist
Using the argument which relates the information available about conscious processes to the type of experimental situation, we maintain that the basic unit of psychological /educational observation is a conversation. In order to test hypotheses and explicate the conversational transactions, it is necessary to invoke various tools and explanatory constructs. These are coherent enough to count when interlocked as a theory, and this theory was dubbed conversation theory.
Source: Conversation Theory (1976), p. 3.
Jean Piaget (1896–1980) Swiss psychologist, biologist, logician, philosopher & academic
Interview with Jean Claude Bringuier (1969)