Vygotsky's Idea of Gestalt and its Origins by Andy Blunden March 2008https://ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/works/gestalt.htm
to Vygotsky’s psychology and his theory of development, but Vygotsky’s idea of Gestalt was not derived from the Gestalt Psychology of Koffka and Köhler. In the 1920s,
The Incommensurability of Scientific Theories (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Winter 2013 Edition)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/archives/win2013/entries/incommensurability/
on experiments in the psychology of perception, Kuhn argued that the rigorous training required for admittance to a paradigm conditions scientist's reactions, expectations and bel
Immanuel Kanthttps://friesian.com/kant.htm
what we know is our own psychology, not external things. Kant did say, consistent with psychologism, that basically we don't know about "things-in-themselves," objects as they exi
NLP And The New Age Movement From A Judeo-Christian Perspectivehttp://www.renewingyourmind.com/Articles/NewAge.htm
domain of cognitive psychology and information processing. If you would like to see specific integrations with that model and the Judeo-Christian perspective, we have following av
The New Alchemyhttp://www.publicappeal.org/library/unicorn/watts/the_new_alchemy.htm
by the transactional psychology of Dewey and Bentley, so the sensation of events happening "of themselves" is just how one would expect to perceive a world consisting entirely of
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