
Cognition
Frank George(Author)
Psychology Press Ltd
1st Edition
Published on 26. March 2015
Book
Hardback
314 pages
978-1-138-91970-9 (ISBN)
Description
Originally published in 1962, the problems of cognition dealt with in this book include learning, perception, thinking, memory and linguistic behaviour.
It is not a textbook in the ordinary sense, since it presents a particular approach to the subject through experimental psychology, and also, to some extent, through philosophy, cybernetics and logic. A brief mention is made of ethological and physiological matters.
It argues that cognition is a stepping-stone to integration with allied sciences. A large-scale study of the organism-as-a-whole needs to be supplemented by other biological and logical studies, but preparatory to this, cognitive psychologists must try and discover more rigorous ways of presenting their theories and models, since the mode of communicating an idea can never be wholly separated from that idea.
Furthermore cognition, even at the organism-as-a-whole level, needs to broaden out and link up with social studies and studies in personality and individual difference.
This book, pointed to a new direction that psychology should take; without contributing greatly to existing knowledge in the obvious sense, it suggests new methods and new ways of regarding the existing knowledge at the time.
It is not a textbook in the ordinary sense, since it presents a particular approach to the subject through experimental psychology, and also, to some extent, through philosophy, cybernetics and logic. A brief mention is made of ethological and physiological matters.
It argues that cognition is a stepping-stone to integration with allied sciences. A large-scale study of the organism-as-a-whole needs to be supplemented by other biological and logical studies, but preparatory to this, cognitive psychologists must try and discover more rigorous ways of presenting their theories and models, since the mode of communicating an idea can never be wholly separated from that idea.
Furthermore cognition, even at the organism-as-a-whole level, needs to broaden out and link up with social studies and studies in personality and individual difference.
This book, pointed to a new direction that psychology should take; without contributing greatly to existing knowledge in the obvious sense, it suggests new methods and new ways of regarding the existing knowledge at the time.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Hove
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Weight
453 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-138-91970-9 (9781138919709)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Person
Frank George
Content
Foreword. 1. The Nature of Cognition 2. Definitions in Cognition 3. The Conditioned Response 4. Learning and Theories of Learning 5. Hull's Theory of Learning 6. Tolman's Theory of Learning 7. Philosophy, Introspection and Cognition 8. Psychological Theory of Perception 9. Gestalt Theory 10. Empiricism and Transactionalism 11. Ethology and Cognition 12. A Theory Language for Cognition 13. Cybernetics and Cognition 14. Cognition and Programming a Computer 15. Memory 16. Thinking 17. Language 18. In Summary. References. Index.


