Open AccessBook
An introduction to comparative psychology
C. Lloyd Morgan
- 01 Jan 1900
663
TL;DR: Theoretical roots of early behaviourism: Functionalism, the Critique of Introspection, and the Nature and Evolution of Consciousness as mentioned in this paper are discussed in detail in the book Theoretical Roots of Early Behaviourism.
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Abstract: The Theoretical Roots of Early Behaviourism: Functionalism, the Critique of Introspection, and the Nature and Evolution of Consciousness. (An Anthology of 26 articles by John Dewey and Henry Bode, among others)[1842-1914] 360pp The Experimental and Comparative Roots of Early Behaviourism: Studies of Animal and Infant Behaviour. (An Anthology of 12 articles by Charles Darwin and Leonard Hobhouse, among others) [1840-1911] 412pp An Introduction to Comparative Psychology [1894] Conwy Lloyd Morgan 628pp Comparative Physiology of the Brain and Comparative Psychology [1900] Jacques Loeb 342pp Fundamental Laws of Human Behaviour [1911] Max Frederick Meyer 264pp Behaviour. An Introduction to Comparative Psychology [1914] John Broadus Watson 482pp
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Citations
Animal Mind: Science, Philosophy, and Ethics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the "valuational revolution" responsible for animal mind denial in terms of the rise of Behaviorism and its flawed account of the historical inevitability of denying animal mentation.
Four hundred years of instinct controversy.
TL;DR: Most issues of the instinct controversy were defined in the seventeenth century, but the twentieth witnessed a revival of anti-instinct attitudes on the eighteenth-century model.
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Integrative levels, the brain, and the emergence of complex behavior.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors bring clarity and unification to the question of how certain complex behaviors, such as feeding, learning, language, culture, and neural complexity, are related to each other.
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