Search Details

Word: psychologistic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Professor Munsterberg came to Cambridge to take charge of the Psychological Laboratory for a term of three years. At the end of this time he returned to Freiberg, where he has since been writing and giving a course in ethics. Professor Munsterberg is perhaps the leading experimental psychologist in Germany today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Munsterberg to Return. | 3/27/1897 | See Source »

Professor Morgan is well known as a psychologist, and has given much time to the study of mind and instinct in animals. He has written several authoritative books upon this and kindred subjects. He is this year delivering a course of Lowell Lectures on "Habit and instinct in Animals...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Morgan to Lecture. | 1/27/1896 | See Source »

...novelist to retain a leadership was obliged to seek novelty, what is rare and curious. He soon turned to the abnormal and deformed and entrenched himself there. The process is a psychological one and English writers have followed it with the difference that instead of making the reader psychologist, they act before his eyes. But the tendency is the same, to manifest the invisible world of inward inclinations and dispositions by the visible world of outward words and actions. Meanwhile the romanticism though declining in vigour, is far from decrepitude and has too been an international influence...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bowdoin Prize Dissertation. | 5/22/1891 | See Source »

...Windsor, the engagement is announced of Dr. Townsend, alliteratively advertised as "Miraculous Mesmerist and Philosophical Psychologist...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THEATRICAL ATTRACTIONS NEXT WEEK. | 4/1/1882 | See Source »

...dynamite would perhaps do the work. By this means the cocoa-nut was successfully cracked, and a small cavity, no larger than a tennis-ball, was laid open. The matter therein examined was viscous, sprinkled with a fine metallic dust resembling brass. One of the surgeons, a clever psychologist, thought that undue conceit had caused the viscosity of the brain tissues. Another attributed the contraction of the cerebral cavity to the course of study pursued by the Senior. A third, with a powerful microscope, found a small particle of knowledge acquired before the subject came to college; the present tense...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TWO SURGICAL OPERATIONS. | 5/7/1880 | See Source »

First | Previous | 686 | 687 | 688 | 689 | 690 | 691 | 692 | 693 | 694 | 695 | 696 | | Last