"Proponents of the cyclical view of history will find in the 1920s poignant parallels with contemporary controversies between "pure" and "applied" psychologists. During that decade no advocate of the ideal of pure research was more embroiled professionally in the bitter debates surrounding that issue than E. G. Boring. While preoccupied with the practicalist challenge, Boring was also at work on his prodigious History of Experimental Psychology."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Academics from the United StatesPsychologists from the United StatesPresidents of the American Psychological AssociationPeople from PhiladelphiaHistorians of science
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
O'Donnell, John M. "The crisis of experimentalism in the 1920s: EG Boring and his uses of history." American Psychologist 34.4 (1979): 289.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Edwin_Boring
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Edwin Boring
Edwin Garrigues Boring (23 October 1886 – 1 July 1968) was an American experimental psychologist, who later became one of the first historians of psychology.
24 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Edwin Boring →
Related Quotes
"I believe that robotic thinking helps precision of psychological thought, and will continue to help it until psychoph…"
"Half the time I read Hayek's The Sensory Order with amazement at the extent of his reading and comprehension … he is …"
"The experimental psychologist... needs historical sophistication within his own sphere of expertness. Without such kn…"
"Broca’s famous observation was in itself very simple. There had in 1831 been admitted at the Bicêtre, an insane hospi…"
"Leibniz foreshadowed the entire doctrine of the unconscious, but Herbart actually began it. Wundt was to appeal first…"
"[ ] was troubled by materialism... His philosophical solution of the spiritual problem lat in his affirmation of the …"
"So far as consciousness goes, one does one's thinking before one knows what he is to think about."
"Titchener interest lay in the generalized, normal, adult mind that had also been Wundt's main concern."
"American psychology inherited its physical body from German experimentalism, but it got its mind from Darwin."
"Sometimes I fear that, if Harvard does not give up trying to turn itself from an Institution of Learning into an Educ…"