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The Psychology of Animals in Relation to Human Psychology

Autor F. Alverdes
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 iun 1999
This is Volume I of four in the Comparative Psychology series. First published in 1932, this study offers a short description of parts of animal psychology as are of interest to a wider public, at the same time exhibiting the many and various relations existing between human and animal psychology.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780415209779
ISBN-10: 0415209773
Pagini: 164
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Difference between living and non-living nature.—The “End” (aim, object, purpose, goal) and the “Whole” as biological fictions.—“The End determines the Means”, and “the Whole determines the Parts”; Chapter 2 General remarks on scientific statement, and more concerning the fictional mode of regarding biological facts.—Consciousness, freedom of will, psyche; Chapter 3 Individuality—the ciliated slipper-animalcule (Paramecium) as individual; Chapter 4 More concerning the individuality of animals possessing numerous like organs of locomotion.—The free-swimming Turbellaria and Starfish; Chapter 5 The individuality of jointed animals, annelids, and arthropods.—The supposed antagonism between the right and left side of the body.—Theories of tropism, and the theory of tropotaxis; Chapter 6 Understanding and explaining.—The attempt at sympathetic understanding of animal behaviour.—Intra-central orientation and disorientation of animals.—Comparative physiology of the senses and nerves in animal psychology; Chapter 7 The animal’s grasp of wholes.—Super-individual wholes; Chapter 8 Primary and secondary knowledge.—Instinctive and experiential activity; Chapter 9 Instinct and experience in human beings.—Behaviour indicating insight in man and animals; Chapter 10 Animal sociology.—Superindividual wholes: marriage, family, society, in man and animals; Chapter 11 Spontaneity and attention.—Understanding and communication.—Emotion and emotional transference.—Personal familiarity.—The will to superiority; Chapter 12 The human being as investigating subject, and object of investigation;