In Defence of Empirical Psychology (Psychology Revivals)

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A01=D. E. Broadbent
Author_D. E. Broadbent
British European Airways
Category=CFD
Category=JMR
cognitive science
command
Command Signal
Context Sensitive Rules
correct
Dah
Dewey Decimal System
empirical analysis of human behaviour
endel
Endel Tulving
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
experimental methodology
Female Cards
Funnel Vision
human decision processes
Hypothetico Deductive Approach
Intermediate File
Intransitive Verb
Jack Pot
lectures
Male Ballet Dancer
Means Group Testing
memory and attention research
Nasty Words
Noun Phrase
Pah
Passive Versions
perception
perception and action
Position Error
previous
Previous Lecture
Relative Incidence
Rewriting Rules
scientific method in psychology
signal
tulving
uncommon
Uncommon Words
Vice Versa
View Point
words

Product details

  • ISBN 9781848723450
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1973, this book contains the 1971 William James Lectures at Harvard, the first by that name to be given by a British psychologist. In addition, there are reprints of four shorter lectures which had not been easily available before. Together the resulting collection gave a broad picture of a number of advances in human psychology in the previous ten years. Memory, attention, language, and the processes of decision are discussed, and typical recent ideas and experiments described. Each topic is presented, however, with continual reference to the reasons why the research was done, its implications for philosophy and for scientific method, and its connection with an attitude to politics and life as a whole. The author not only describes little known facts about the way people take decisions or remember, but also argues that we are living through a change in our attitudes to human nature: and that proper concern for human values, or understanding of people with minds different from our own, must demand a more scientific and less intuitive analysis of man.

Experiments on human beings still strike many of us as cold-blooded and inhuman; this book tries to explain why some scientists devote themselves to this approach. It makes the connection between measurements of reaction time or of ability to see a written word in a brief flash, and our political and personal beliefs.

Donald E. Broadbent is well recognised as a major influence on cognitive psychology today. This reissue is an opportunity to see his exceptional writing in print again and should be read with equal interest by psychologists as well as laymen who would like to know about some of the more practical aspects of psychological enquiry of the time.

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