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
Current Perceptions and Historical Perspective
Gordon M. Burghardt
- 01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: A survey of current lay attitudes on mental continuity between humans and nonhumans shows that emo- tional continuity is considered more likely than intellectual continuity and that acceptance of evolution favorably disposes people to both as discussed by the authors.
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•Journal Article
The Interface between Learning and Cognition:The 2010 Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior Focus Session
TL;DR: This special issue provides a venue for contemporary scientists involved in this debate to express their views, and follows from a Focus Session of the same title held at the 2010 meeting of the Winter Conference in Animal Learning & Behavior.
Me, Myself, and Semiotic Function: Finding the “I” in Biology
TL;DR: The authors argue that the distinction between voluntary and autonomic behavior is but a ghost of older dualisms, and all such pseudo-contradictions are resolved as scale-thick, self-similar examples of semiotic transaction wherein degeneration or habituation on one scale of life allows for generative or novel interaction on another.
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