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Box 15

 Container

Contains 41 Results:

"Discussion: Professor Martin on the Perlay Experiments," American Journal of Psychology, January 1913

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: January 1913

"Discussion: The Method of Examination," American Journal of Psychology, July 1913

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: July 1913

"A Note on Sensation and Sentiment," American Journal of Psychology, April 1914

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: April 1914

"An Historical Note on the James-Lange Theory of Emotion," American Journal of Psychology, July 1914

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: July 1914

"Sensation and System," American Journal of Psychology, April 1915

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: April 1915

"Professor Stumpf's Affective Psychology," American Journal of Psychology, April 1917

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: April 1917

"Minor Studies from the Psychological Laboratory of Cornell University," American Journal of Psychology, October 1917

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: October 1917

"An Anomalous Case of Simple Reaction," American Journal of Psychology, January 1919

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: January 1919

"Experimental Psychology: A Retrospect," American Journal of Psychology, July 1925

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: July 1925

"Recent Advance in Psychology," The International Monthly, August 1900

 Item — Box: 15
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION From the Collection: Largely correspondence presenting a picture of the professional status and varied interests of a scholar of international reputation, and containing much information on fellow psychologists, psychology departments at other universities, and the struggle of psychology to establish itself as an academic discipline. Most of the correspondence is incoming, but carbon copies of Titchener's letters are available in large quantity from 1921 through 1927. There is also correspondence with colleagues...
Dates: August 1900