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Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt (/wʊnt/; German: [vʊnt]; 16 August 1832 – 31 August 1920) was a German physiologist, philosopher, and professor, one of the fathers of modern psychology. Wundt, who distinguished psychology as a science from philosophy and biology, was the first person to call himself a psychologist.
Wilhelm Wundt | |
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![]() Wundt in 1902 | |
Born | Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt 16 August 1832 Neckarau near Mannheim, Grand Duchy of Baden, German Confederation |
Died | 31 August 1920 Großbothen, Saxony, Germany | (aged 88)
Education | University of Heidelberg (MD, 1856) |
Known for | Experimental psychology Cultural psychology Apperception |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Experimental psychology, Cultural psychology, philosophy, physiology |
Institutions | University of Leipzig |
Thesis | Untersuchungen über das Verhalten der Nerven in entzündeten und degenerierten Organen (Research of the Behaviour of Nerves in Inflamed and Degenerated Organs) (1856) |
Doctoral advisor | Karl Ewald Hasse |
Other academic advisors | Hermann von Helmholtz Johannes Peter Müller |
Doctoral students | James McKeen Cattell, G. Stanley Hall, Oswald Külpe, Hugo Münsterberg, Ljubomir Nedić, Walter Dill Scott, George M. Stratton, Edward B. Titchener, Lightner Witmer |
He is widely regarded as the "father of experimental psychology". In 1879, at the University of Leipzig, Wundt founded the first formal laboratory for psychological research. This marked psychology as an independent field of study.
He also established the first academic journal for psychological research, Philosophische Studien (from 1883 to 1903), followed by Psychologische Studien (from 1905 to 1917), to publish the institute's research.
A survey published in American Psychologist in 1991 ranked Wundt's reputation as first for "all-time eminence", based on ratings provided by 29 American historians of psychology. William James and Sigmund Freud were ranked a distant second and third.
Biography
Early life
Wundt was born at Neckarau, Baden (now part of Mannheim) on 16 August 1832, the fourth child to parents Maximilian Wundt (1787–1846), a Lutheran minister, and Marie Frederike, née Arnold (1797–1868). Two of Wundt's siblings died in childhood; his brother, Ludwig, survived. Wundt's paternal grandfather was Friedrich Peter Wundt (1742–1805), professor of geography and pastor in Wieblingen. When Wundt was about six years of age, his family moved to Heidelsheim, then a small medieval town in Baden-Württemberg.
Born in the German Confederation at a time that was considered very economically stable, Wundt grew up during a period in which the reinvestment of wealth into educational, medical and technological development was commonplace. An economic striving for the advancement of knowledge catalyzed the development of a new psychological study method, and facilitated his development into the prominent psychological figure he is today.[failed verification]
Education and Heidelberg career
Wundt studied from 1851 to 1856 at the University of Tübingen, at the University of Heidelberg, and at the University of Berlin. After graduating as a doctor of medicine from Heidelberg (1856), with doctoral advisor Karl Ewald Hasse, Wundt studied briefly with Johannes Peter Müller, before joining the Heidelberg University's staff, becoming an assistant to the physicist and physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz in 1858 with responsibility for teaching the laboratory course in physiology. There he wrote Contributions to the Theory of Sense Perception (1858–1862). In 1864, he became associate professor for anthropology and medical psychology and published a textbook about human physiology. However, his main interest, according to his lectures and classes, was not in the medical field – he was more attracted by psychology and related subjects. His lectures on psychology were published as Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology in 1863–1864. Wundt applied himself to writing a work that came to be one of the most important in the history of psychology, Principles of Physiological Psychology, in 1874. This was the first textbook that was written pertaining to the field of experimental psychology.
Marriage and family
In 1867, near Heidelberg, Wundt met Sophie Mau (1844–1912). She was the eldest daughter of the Kiel theology professor
and his wife Louise, née von Rumohr, and a sister of the archaeologist August Mau. They married on 14 August 1872 in Kiel. The couple had three children: Eleanor (1876–1957), who became an assistant to her father in many ways, Louise, called Lilli, (1880–1884) and (1879–1963), who became a philosophy professor.Career in Zurich and Leipzig
In 1875, Wundt was promoted to professor of "Inductive Philosophy" in Zurich, and in 1875, Wundt was made professor of philosophy at the University of Leipzig where Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795–1878) and Gustav Theodor Fechner (1801–1887) had initiated research on sensory psychology and psychophysics – and where two centuries earlier Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz had developed his philosophy and theoretical psychology, which strongly influenced Wundt's intellectual path. Wundt's admiration for Ernst Heinrich Weber was clear from his memoirs, where he proclaimed that Weber should be regarded as the father of experimental psychology: "I would rather call Weber the father of experimental psychology…It was Weber's great contribution to think of measuring psychic quantities and of showing the exact relationships between them, to be the first to understand this and carry it out."
Laboratory of Experimental Psychology
In 1879, at the University of Leipzig, Wundt opened the first laboratory ever to be exclusively devoted to psychological studies, and this event marked the official birth of psychology as an independent field of study. The new lab was full of graduate students carrying out research on topics assigned by Wundt, and it soon attracted young scholars from all over the world who were eager to learn about the new science that Wundt had developed.
The University of Leipzig assigned Wundt a lab in 1876 to store equipment he had brought from Zurich. Located in the Konvikt building, many of Wundt's demonstrations took place in this laboratory due to the inconvenience of transporting his equipment between the lab and his classroom. Wundt arranged for the construction of suitable instruments and collected many pieces of equipment such as tachistoscopes, chronoscopes, pendulums, electrical devices, timers, and sensory mapping devices, and was known to assign an instrument to various graduate students with the task of developing uses for future research in experimentation. Between 1885 and 1909, there were 15 assistants.
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In 1879, Wundt began conducting experiments that were not part of his course work, and he claimed that these independent experiments solidified his lab's legitimacy as a formal laboratory of psychology, though the university did not officially recognize the building as part of the campus until 1883. The laboratory grew and encompassed a total of eleven rooms. The Psychological Institute, as it became known, eventually moved to a new building that Wundt had designed specifically for psychological research.
Wundt's teaching in the Institute for Experimental Psychology
The list of Wundt's lectures during the winter terms of 1875–1879 shows a wide-ranging programme, 6 days a week, on average 2 hours daily, e.g. in the winter term of 1875: Psychology of language, Anthropology, Logic and Epistemology; and during the subsequent summer term: Psychology, Brain and Nerves, as well as Physiology. Cosmology, Historical and General Philosophy were included in the following terms.
Wundt's doctoral students
Wundt was responsible for an extraordinary number of doctoral dissertations between 1875 and 1919: 185 students including 70 foreigners (of whom 23 were from Russia, Poland, and other east-European countries and 18 were from America). Several of Wundt's students became eminent psychologists in their own right. They include the Germans Oswald Külpe (a professor at the University of Würzburg), Ernst Meumann (a professor in Leipzig and in Hamburg and a pioneer in pedagogical psychology), Hugo Münsterberg (a professor in Freiburg and at Harvard University, a pioneer in applied psychology), and cultural psychologist Willy Hellpach, and the Armenian Gourgen Edilyan.
The Americans listed include James McKeen Cattell (the first professor of psychology in the United States), Granville Stanley Hall (the father of the child psychology movement and adolescent developmental theorist, head of Clark University), Charles Hubbard Judd (Director of the School of Education at the University of Chicago), Walter Dill Scott (who contributed to the development of industrial psychology and taught at Harvard University), Edward Bradford Titchener, Lightner Witmer (founder of the first psychological clinic in his country), Frank Angell, Edward Wheeler Scripture, James Mark Baldwin (one of the founders of Princeton's Department of Psychology and who made important contributions to early psychology, psychiatry, and to the theory of evolution).
Wundt, thus, is present in the academic "family tree" of the majority of American psychologists, first and second generation. – Worth mentioning are the Englishman Charles Spearman; the Romanian Constantin Rădulescu-Motru (Personalist philosopher and head of the Philosophy department at the university of Bucharest), Hugo Eckener, the manager of the Luftschiffbau Zeppelin – not to mention those students who became philosophers (like Rudolf Eisler or the Serbian Ljubomir Nedić). – Students (or visitors) who were later to become well known included Vladimir Mikhailovich Bekhterev (Bechterev), Franz Boas, Émile Durkheim, Edmund Husserl, Bronisław Malinowski, George Herbert Mead, Edward Sapir, Ferdinand Tönnies, Benjamin Lee Whorf.
Much of Wundt's work was derided mid-century in the United States because of a lack of adequate translations, misrepresentations by certain students, and behaviorism's polemic with Wundt's program.
Retirement and death
Wundt retired in 1917 to devote himself to his scientific writing. According to Wirth (1920), over the summer of 1920, Wundt "felt his vitality waning ... and soon after his eighty-eighth birthday, he died ... a gentle death on the afternoon of Tuesday, August 3" (p. 1). Wundt is buried in Leipzig's South Cemetery with his wife, Sophie, and their daughters, Lilli and Eleanor.
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Awards and Honors
Wundt was awarded honorary doctorates from the Universities of Leipzig and Göttingen, and the Pour le Mérite for Science and Arts. He was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Wundt was an honorary member of 12 scientific organizations or societies. He was a corresponding member of 13 academies in Germany and abroad. For example, he was elected an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1895 and of the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1909.
Wundt's name was given to the Asteroid Vundtia (635).
Overview of Wundt's work
Wundt was initially a physician and a well-known neurophysiologist before turning to sensory physiology and psychophysics. He was convinced that, for example, the process of spatial perception could not solely be explained on a physiological level, but also involved psychological principles. Wundt founded experimental psychology as a discipline and became a pioneer of cultural psychology. He created a broad research programme in empirical psychology and developed a system of philosophy and ethics from the basic concepts of his psychology – bringing together several disciplines in one person.
Wundt's epistemological position – against John Locke and English empiricism (sensualism) – was made clear in his book Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung (Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception) published in 1862, by his use of a quotation from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the title page:
"Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu, nisi intellectu ipse." (Leibniz, Nouveaux essais, 1765, Livre II, Des Idées, Chapitre 1, § 6). – Nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses, except the intellect itself.
Principles that are not present in sensory impressions can be recognised in human perception and consciousness: logical inferences, categories of thought, the principle of causality, the principle of purpose (teleology), the principle of emergence and other epistemological principles.
Wundt's most important books are:
- Lehrbuch der Physiologie des Menschen (Textbook of Human Physiology) (1864/1865, 4th ed. 1878);
- Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie (Principles of Physiological Psychology), (1874; 6th ed. 1908–1911, 3 Vols.);
- System der Philosophie (System of Philosophy), (1889; 4th ed. 1919, 2 Vols.);
- Logik. Eine Untersuchung der Prinzipien der Erkenntnis und der Methoden wissenschaftlicher Forschung (Logic. An investigation into the principles of knowledge and the methods of scientific research), (1880–1883; 4th ed. 1919–1921, 3 Vols.);
- Ethik (Ethics), (1886; 3rd ed. 1903, 2 Vols.);
- Völkerpsychologie. Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache, Mythos und Sitte (Cultural Psychology. An investigation into developmental laws of language, myth, and conduct), (1900–1920, 10 Vols.);
- Grundriss der Psychologie (Outline of Psychology), (1896; 14th ed. 1920).
These 22 volumes cover an immense variety of topics. On examination of the complete works, however, a close relationship between Wundt's theoretical psychology, epistemology and methodology can be seen. English translations are only available for the best-known works: Principles of physiological Psychology (only the single-volume 1st ed. of 1874) and Ethics (also only 1st ed. of 1886). Wundt's work remains largely inaccessible without advanced knowledge of German. Its reception, therefore, is still greatly hampered by misunderstandings, stereotypes and superficial judgements.
Central themes in Wundt's work
Memory
Wilhelm Wundt conducted experiments on memory, which would be considered today as iconic memory, short-term memory, and enactment and generation effects.
Process theory
Psychology is interested in the current process, i.e. the mental changes and functional relationships between perception, cognition, emotion, and volition/ motivation. Mental (psychological) phenomena are changing processes of consciousness. They can only be determined as an actuality, an "immediate reality of an event in the psychological experience". The relationships of consciousness, i.e. the actively organising processes, are no longer explained metaphysically by means of an immortal 'soul' or an abstract transcendental (spiritual) principle.
The delineation of categories
Wundt considered that reference to the subject (Subjektbezug), value assessment (Wertbestimmung), the existence of purpose (Zwecksetzung), and volitional acts (Willenstätigkeit) to be specific and fundamental categories for psychology. He frequently used the formulation "the human as a motivated and thinking subject" in order to characterise features held in common with the humanities and the categorical difference to the natural sciences.
Psychophysical parallelism
Influenced by Leibniz, Wundt introduced the term psychophysical parallelism as follows: "… wherever there are regular relationships between mental and physical phenomena the two are neither identical nor convertible into one another because they are per se incomparable; but they are associated with one another in the way that certain mental processes regularly correspond to certain physical processes or, figuratively expressed, run 'parallel to one another'." Although the inner experience is based on the functions of the brain there are no physical causes for mental changes.
Leibniz wrote: "Souls act according to the laws of final causes, through aspirations, ends and means. Bodies act according to the laws of efficient causes, i.e. the laws of motion. And these two realms, that of efficient causes and that of final causes, harmonize with one another." (Monadology, Paragraph 79).
Wundt follows Leibniz and differentiates between a physical causality (natural causality of neurophysiology) and a mental (psychic) causality of the consciousness process. Both causalities, however, are not opposites in a dualistic metaphysical sense, but depend on the standpoint.Causal explanations in psychology must be content to seek the effects of the antecedent causes without being able to derive exact predictions. Using the example of volitional acts, Wundt describes possible inversion in considering cause and effect, ends and means, and explains how causal and teleological explanations can complement one another to establish a co-ordinated consideration.
Wundt's position differed from contemporary authors who also favoured parallelism. Instead of being content with the postulate of parallelism, he developed his principles of mental causality in contrast to the natural causality of neurophysiology, and a corresponding methodology. There are two fundamentally different approaches of the postulated psychophysical unit, not just two points-of-view in the sense of Gustav Theodor Fechner's identity hypothesis. Psychological and physiological statements exist in two categorically different reference systems; the important categories are to be emphasised in order to prevent category mistakes as discussed by Nicolai Hartmann. In this regard, Wundt created the first genuine epistemology and methodology of empirical psychology (the term philosophy of science did not yet exist).
Apperception
Apperception is Wundt's central theoretical concept. Leibniz described apperception as the process in which the elementary sensory impressions pass into (self-)consciousness, whereby individual aspirations (striving, volitional acts) play an essential role. Wundt developed psychological concepts, used experimental psychological methods and put forward neuropsychological modelling in the frontal cortex of the brain system – in line with today's thinking. Apperception exhibits a range of theoretical assumptions on the integrative process of consciousness. The selective control of attention is an elementary example of such active cognitive, emotional and motivational integration.
Development theory of the mind
The fundamental task is to work out a comprehensive development theory of the mind – from animal psychology to the highest cultural achievements in language, religion and ethics. Unlike other thinkers of his time, Wundt had no difficulty connecting the development concepts of the humanities (in the spirit of Friedrich Hegel and Johann Gottfried Herder) with the biological theory of evolution as expounded by Charles Darwin.
Critical realism
Wundt determined that "psychology is an empirical science co-ordinating natural science and humanities, and that the considerations of both complement one another in the sense that only together can they create for us a potential empirical knowledge." He claimed that his views were free of metaphysics and were based on certain epistemological presuppositions, including the differentiation of subject and object in the perception, and the principle of causality. With his term critical realism, Wundt distinguishes himself from other philosophical positions.
Definition of psychology
Wundt set himself the task of redefining the broad field of psychology between philosophy and physiology, between the humanities and the natural sciences. In place of the metaphysical definition as a science of the soul came the definition, based on scientific theory, of empirical psychology as a psychology of consciousness with its own categories and epistemological principles. Psychology examines the "entire experience in its immediately subjective reality." The task of psychology is to precisely analyse the processes of consciousness, to assess the complex connections (psychische Verbindungen), and to find the laws governing such relationships.
- Psychology is 'not a science of the individual soul . Life is a uniform mental and physical process that can be considered in a variety of ways in order to recognise general principles, particularly the psychological-historical and biological principles of development. Wundt demanded an understanding of the emotional and the volitional functions, in addition to cognitive features, as equally important aspects of the unitary (whole) psychophysical process.
- Psychology cannot be reduced to physiology. The tools of physiology remain fundamentally insufficient for the task of psychology. Such a project is meaningless "because the interrelations between mental processes would be incomprehensible even if the interrelations between brain processes were as clearly understood as the mechanism of a pocket watch."
- Psychology is concerned with conscious processes. Wundt rejected making subconscious mental processes a topic of scientific psychology for epistemological and methodological reasons. In his day there were, before Sigmund Freud, influential authors such as the philosopher Eduard von Hartmann (1901), who postulated a metaphysics of the unconscious. Wundt had two fundamental objections. He rejected all primarily metaphysically founded psychology and he saw no reliable methodological approach. He also soon revised his initial assumptions about unconscious judgements When Wundt rejects the assumption of "the unconscious" he is also showing his scepticism regarding Fechner's theory of the unconscious and Wundt is perhaps even more greatly influenced by the flood of writing at the time on hypnotism and spiritualism (Wundt, 1879, 1892). While Freud frequently quoted from Wundt's work, Wundt remained sceptical about all hypotheses that operated with the concept of "the unconscious".For Wundt it would be just as much a misunderstanding to define psychology as a behavioural science in the sense of the later concept of strict behaviourism. Numerous behavioural and psychological variables had already been observed or measured at the Leipzig laboratory. Wundt stressed that physiological effects, for example the physiological changes accompanying feelings, were only tools of psychology, as were the physical measurements of stimulus intensity in psychophysics. Further developing these methodological approaches one-sidedly would ultimately, however, lead to a behavioural physiology, i.e. a scientific reductionism, and not to a general psychology and cultural psychology.
- Psychology is an empirical humanities science. Wundt was convinced of the triple status of psychology:
- as a science of the direct experience it contrasts with the natural sciences that refer to the indirect content of experience and abstract from the subject;
- as a science "of generally valid forms of direct human experience it is the foundation of the humanities";
- among all the empirical sciences it was "the one whose results most benefit the examination of the general problems of epistemology and ethics – the two fundamental areas of philosophy."
Wundt's concepts were developed during almost 60 years of research and teaching that led him from neurophysiology to psychology and philosophy. The interrelationships between physiology, philosophy, logic, epistemology and ethics are therefore essential for an understanding of Wundt's psychology. The core of Wundt's areas of interest and guiding ideas can already be seen in his Vorlesungen über die Menschen- und Tierseele (Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology) of 1863: individual psychology (now known as general psychology, i.e. areas such as perception, attention, apperception, volition, will, feelings and emotions); cultural psychology (Wundt's Völkerpsychologie) as development theory of the human mind); animal psychology; and neuropsychology. The initial conceptual outlines of the 30-year-old Wundt (1862, 1863) led to a long research program, to the founding of the first Institute and to the treatment of psychology as a discipline, as well as to a range of fundamental textbooks and numerous other publications.
Physiology
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During the Heidelberg years from 1853 to 1873, Wundt published numerous essays on physiology, particularly on experimental neurophysiology, a textbook on human physiology (1865, 4th ed. 1878) and a manual of medical physics (1867). He wrote about 70 reviews of current publications in the fields of neurophysiology and neurology, physiology, anatomy and histology. A second area of work was sensory physiology, including spatial perception, visual perception and optical illusions. An optical illusion described by him is called the Wundt illusion, a variant of the Hering Illusion. It shows how straight lines appear curved when seen against a set of radiating lines.
Psychology
Starting point
As a result of his medical training and his work as an assistant to Hermann von Helmholtz, Wundt knew the benchmarks of experimental research, as well as the speculative nature of psychology in the mid-19th century. Wundt's aspiration for scientific research and the necessary methodological critique were clear when he wrote of the language of ordinary people, who merely invoked their personal experiences of life, criticized naive introspection, or quoted the influence of uncritical amateur ("folk") psychology on psychological interpretation.
His Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung (1862) shows Wundt's transition from a physiologist to an experimental psychologist. "Why does not psychology follow the example of the natural sciences? It is an understanding that, from every side of the history of the natural sciences, informs us that the progress of every science is closely connected with the progress made regarding experimental methods." With this statement, however, he will in no way treat psychology as a pure natural science, though psychologists should learn from the progress of methods in the natural sciences: "There are two sciences that must come to the aid of general psychology in this regard: the development history of the mind and comparative psychology."
General psychology
The Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie (Main Features of Physiological Psychology) on general psychology is Wundt's best-known textbook. He wanted to connect two sciences with one another. "Physiology provides information on all phenomena of life that can be perceived using our external senses. In psychology humans examine themselves, as it were, from within and look for the connections between these processes to explain which of them represent this inner observation."
"With sufficient certainty the approach can indeed be seen as well-founded – that nothing takes place in our consciousness that does not have its physical basis in certain physiological processes.". Wundt believed that physiological psychology had the following task: "firstly, to investigate those life processes that are centrally located, between external and internal experience, which make it necessary to use both observation methods simultaneously, external and internal, and, secondly, to illuminate and, where possible, determine a total view of human existence from the points of view gained from this investigation." "The attribute 'physiological' is not saying that it ... [physiological psychology] ... wants to reduce the psychology to physiology – which I consider impossible – but that it works with physiological, i.e. experimental, tools and, indeed, more so than is usual in other psychology, takes into account the relationship between mental and physical processes." "If one wants to treat the peculiarities of the method as the most important factor then our science – as experimental psychology – differs from the usual science of the soul purely based on self-observation." After long chapters on the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system, the Grundzüge (1874) has five sections: the mental elements, mental structure, interactions of the mental structure, mental developments, the principles and laws of mental causality. Through his insistence that mental processes were analysed in their elements, Wundt did not want to create a pure element psychology because the elements should simultaneously be related to one another. He describes the sensory impression with the simple sensory feelings, perceptions and volitional acts connected with them, and he explains dependencies and feedbacks.
Apperception theory
Wundt rejected the widespread association theory, according to which mental connections (learning) are mainly formed through the frequency and intensity of particular processes. His term apperception psychology means that he considered the creative conscious activity to be more important than elementary association. Apperception is an emergent activity that is both arbitrary and selective as well as imaginative and comparative. In this process, feelings and ideas are images apperceptively connected with typical tones of feeling, selected in a variety of ways, analysed, associated and combined, as well as linked with motor and autonomic functions – not simply processed but also creatively synthesised (see below on the Principle of creative synthesis). In the integrative process of conscious activity, Wundt sees an elementary activity of the subject, i.e. an act of volition, to deliberately move content into the conscious. Insofar that this emergent activity is typical of all mental processes, it is possible to describe his point-of-view as voluntaristic.
Wundt describes apperceptive processes as psychologically highly differentiated and, in many regards, bases this on methods and results from his experimental research. One example is the wide-ranging series of experiments on the mental chronometry of complex reaction times. In research on feelings, certain effects are provoked while pulse and breathing are recorded using a kymograph. The observed differences were intended to contribute towards supporting Wundt's theory of emotions with its three dimensions: pleasant – unpleasant, tense – relaxed, excited – depressed.
Cultural psychology
Wilhelm Wundt's Völkerpsychologie. Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache, Mythus und Sitte (Social Psychology. An Investigation of the Laws of Evolution of Language, Myth, and Custom, 1900–1920, 10 Vols.) which also contains the evolution of Arts, Law, Society, Culture and History, is a milestone project, a monument of cultural psychology, of the early 20th century. The dynamics of cultural development were investigated according to psychological and epistemological principles. Psychological principles were derived from Wundt's psychology of apperception (theory of higher integrative processes, including association, assimilation, semantic change) and motivation (will), as presented in his Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie (1908–1910, 6th ed., 3 Vols.). In contrast to individual psychology, cultural psychology aims to illustrate general mental development laws governing higher intellectual processes: the development of thought, language, artistic imagination, myths, religion, customs, the relationship of individuals to society, the intellectual environment and the creation of intellectual works in a society. "Where deliberate experimentation ends is where history has experimented on the behalf of psychologists." Those mental processes that "underpin the general development of human societies and the creation of joint intellectual results that are of generally recognised value" are to be examined.
Stimulated by the ideas of previous thinkers, such as Johann Gottfried Herder, Johann Friedrich Herbart, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Wilhelm von Humboldt (with his ideas about comparative linguistics), the psychologist Moritz Lazarus (1851) and the linguist Heymann Steinthal founded the Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft (Journal for Cultural Psychology and Linguistics) in 1860, which gave this field its name. Wundt (1888) critically analysed the, in his view, still disorganised intentions of Lazarus and Steinthal and limited the scope of the issues by proposing a psychologically constituted structure. The cultural psychology of language, myth, and customs were to be based on the three main areas of general psychology: imagining and thought, feelings, and will (motivation). The numerous mental interrelations and principles were to be researched under the perspective of cultural development. Apperception theory applied equally for general psychology and cultural psychology. Changes in meanings and motives were examined in many lines of development, and there are detailed interpretations based on the emergence principle (creative synthesis), the principle of unintended side-effects (heterogony of ends) and the principle of contrast (see section on Methodology and Strategies).
The ten volumes consist of: Language (Vols. 1 and 2), Art (Vol. 3), Myths and Religion (Vols. 4 – 6), Society (Vols. 7 and 8), Law (Vol. 9), as well as Culture and History (Vol. 10). The methodology of cultural psychology was mainly described later, in Logik (1921). Wundt worked on, psychologically linked, and structured an immense amount of material. The topics range from agriculture and trade, crafts and property, through gods, myths and Christianity, marriage and family, peoples and nations to (self-)education and self-awareness, science, the world and humanity.
Wundt recognized about 20 fundamental dynamic motives in cultural development. Motives frequently quoted in cultural development are: division of labour, ensoulment, salvation, happiness, production and imitation, child-raising, artistic drive, welfare, arts and magic, adornment, guilt, punishment, atonement, self-education, play, and revenge. Other values and motives emerge in the areas of freedom and justice, war and peace, legal structures, state structures and forms of government; also regarding the development of a world view of culture, religion, state, traffic, and a worldwide political and social society. In religious considerations, many of the values and motives (i.e. belief in soul, immortality, belief in gods and demons, ritualistic acts, witchcraft, animism and totemism) are combined with the motives of art, imagination, dance and ecstasy, as well as with forms of family and power.
Wundt saw examples of human self-education in walking upright, physical facilities and "an interaction in part forced upon people by external conditions and in part the result of voluntary culture". He described the random appearance and later conscious control of fire as a similar interaction between two motives. In the interaction of human activity and the conditions of nature he saw a creative principle of culture right from the start; tools as cultural products of a second nature. An interactive system of cause and effect, a system of purposes and thus values (and reflexively from standards of one's own activities) is formed according to the principles of one's own thinking.
In the Elemente der Völkerpsychologie (The Elements of Cultural Psychology, 1912) Wundt sketched out four main levels of cultural development: primitive man, the totemistic age, the age of heroes and gods, and the development of humanity. The delineations were unclear and the depiction was greatly simplified. Only this book was translated into English Elements of folk-psychology), thus providing but a much abridged insight into Wundt's differentiated cultural psychology. (The Folk Psychology part of the title already demonstrates the low level of understanding).
In retrospect, 'Völkerpsychologie' was an unfortunate choice of title because it is often misinterpreted as ethnology. Wundt also considered calling it (Social) Anthropology, Social Psychology and Community Psychology. The term Kulturpsychologie would have been more fitting though psychological development theory of the mind would have expressed Wundt's intentions even better. The intellectual potential and heuristics of Wundt's Cultural Psychology are by no means exhausted.
Neuropsychology
Wundt contributed to the state of neuropsychology as it existed at the time in three ways: through his criticism of the theory of localisation (then widespread in neurology), through his demand for research hypotheses founded on both neurological and psychological thinking, and through his neuropsychological concept of an apperception centre in the frontal cortex. Wundt considered attention and the control of attention an excellent example of the desirable combination of experimental psychological and neurophysiological research. Wundt called for experimentation to localise the higher central nervous functions to be based on clear, psychologically based research hypotheses because the questions could not be rendered precisely enough on the anatomical and physiological levels alone.
![image](https://www.english.nina.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.jpg)
Wundt based his central theory of apperception on neuropsychological modelling (from the 3rd edition of the Grundzüge onwards). According to this, the hypothetical apperception centre in the frontal cerebral cortex that he described could interconnect sensory, motor, autonomic, cognitive, emotional and motivational process components Wundt thus provided the guiding principle of a primarily psychologically oriented research programme on the highest integrative processes. He is therefore a forerunner of current research on cognitive and emotional executive functions in the prefrontal cerebral cortex, and on hypothetical multimodal convergence zones in the network of cortical and limbic functions. This concept of an interdisciplinary neuroscience is now taken for granted, but Wundt's contribution towards this development has almost been forgotten. C.S. Sherrington repeatedly quotes Wundt's research on the physiology of the reflexes in his textbook, but not Wundt's neuropsychological concepts.
Methodology and strategies
"Given its position between the natural sciences and the humanities, psychology really does have a great wealth of methodological tools. While, on the one hand, there are the experimental methods, on the other hand, objective works and products in cultural development (Objektivationen des menschlichen Geistes) also offer up abundant material for comparative psychological analysis".
Psychology is an empirical science and must endeavor to achieve a systematic procedure, examination of results, and criticism of its methodology. Thus self-observation must be trained and is only permissible under strict experimental control; Wundt decisively rejects naive introspection. Wundt provided a standard definition of psychological experiments. His criticism of Immanuel Kant (Wundt, 1874) had a major influence. Kant had argued against the assumption of the measurability of conscious processes and made a well-founded, if very short, criticism of the methods of self-observation: regarding method-inherent reactivity, observer error, distorting attitudes of the subject, and the questionable influence of independently thinking people, but Wundt expressed himself optimistic that methodological improvements could be of help here. He later admitted that measurement and mathematics were only applicable for very elementary conscious processes. Statistical methods were also of only limited value, for example in psychophysics or in the evaluation of population statistics.
Experimental psychology in Leipzig mainly lent on four methodological types of assessment: the impression methods with their various measurement techniques in psychophysics; the reaction methods for chronometry in the psychology of apperception; the reproduction methods in research on memory, and the expression methods with observations and psychophysiological measurement in research on feelings. Wundt considered the methodology of his linguistic psychological investigations (Vols. 1 and 2 of Völkerpsychologie) to be the most fruitful path to adequate psychological research on the thought process.
The principles of his cultural psychological methodology were only worked out later. These involved the analytical and comparative observation of objective existing materials, i.e. historical writings, language, works, art, reports and observations of human behaviour in earlier cultures and, more rarely, direct ethnological source material. Wundt differentiated between two objectives of comparative methodology: individual comparison collected all the important features of the overall picture of an observation material, while generic comparison formed a picture of variations to obtain a typology. Rules of generic comparison and critical interpretation are essentially explained in his Logik:
"We therefore generally describe the epitome of the methods as interpretation that is intended to provide us with an understanding of mental processes and intellectual creation." Wundt clearly referred to the tradition of humanistic hermeneutics, but argued that the interpretation process basically also followed psychological principles. Interpretation only became the characteristic process of the humanities through criticism. It is a process that is set against interpretation to dismantle the interaction produced through psychological analysis. It examines external or internal contradictions, it should evaluate the reality of intellectual products, and is also a criticism of values and a criticism of opinions. The typical misconceptions of the intellectualistic, individualistic and unhistorical interpretation of intellectual processes all have "their source in the habitually coarse psychology based on subjective assessment."
Principles of mental causality
What is meant by these principles is the simple prerequisites of the linking of psychological facts that cannot be further extrapolated. The system of principles has several repeatedly reworked versions, with corresponding laws of development for cultural psychology (Wundt, 1874, 1894, 1897, 1902–1903, 1920, 1921). Wundt mainly differentiated between four principles and explained them with examples that originate from the physiology of perception, the psychology of meaning, from apperception research, emotion and motivation theory, and from cultural psychology and ethics.
- The Principle of creative synthesis or creative results (the emergence principle). "Every perception can be broken down into elemental impressions. But it is never just the sum of these impressions, but from the linkage of them that a new one is created with individual features that were not contained in the impressions themselves. We thus put together the mental picture of a spatial form from a multitude of impressions of light. This principle proves itself in all mental causality linkages and accompanies mental development from its first to its consummate stage." Wundt formulated this creative synthesis, which today would also be described as the principle of emergence in system theory, as an essential epistemological principle of empirical psychology – long before the phrase the whole is more than the sum of its parts or supra-summation was used in gestalt psychology.
- The Principle of relational analysis (context principle). This principle says that "every individual mental content receives its meaning through the relationships in which it stands to other mental content."
- The Principle of mental contrasts or reinforcement of opposites or development in dichotomies. Typical contrast effects are to be seen in sensory perceptions, in the course of emotions and in volitional processes. There is a general tendency to order the subjective world according to opposites. Thus many individual, historical, economic and social processes exhibit highly contrasting developments.
- The Principle of the heterogony of purpose (ends). The consequences of an action extend beyond the original intended purpose and give rise to new motives with new effects. The intended purpose always induces side-effects and knock-on effects that themselves become purposes, i.e. an ever-growing organisation through self-creation.
In addition to these four principles, Wundt explained the term of intellectual community and other categories and principles that have an important relational and insightful function.
Wundt demands co-ordinated analysis of causal and teleological aspects; he called for a methodologically versatile psychology and did not demand that any decision be made between experimental-statistical methods and interpretative methods (qualitative methods). Whenever appropriate, he referred to findings from interpretation and experimental research within a multimethod approach. Thus, for example, the chapters on the development of language or on enlargement of fantasy activity in cultural psychology also contain experimental, statistical and psychophysiological findings. He was very familiar with these methods and used them in extended research projects. This was without precedent and has, since then, rarely been achieved by another individual researcher.
Philosophy
Wundt's philosophical orientation
In the introduction to his Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie in 1874, Wundt described Immanuel Kant and Johann Friedrich Herbart as the philosophers who had the most influence on the formation of his own views. Those who follow up these references will find that Wundt critically analysed both these thinkers' ideas. He distanced himself from Herbart's science of the soul and, in particular, from his "mechanism of mental representations" and pseudo-mathematical speculations. While Wundt praised Kant's critical work and his rejection of a "rational" psychology deduced from metaphysics, he argued against Kant's epistemology in his publication Was soll uns Kant nicht sein? (What Kant should we reject?) 1892 with regard to the forms of perception and presuppositions, as well as Kant's category theory and his position in the dispute on causal and teleological explanations.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz had a far greater and more constructive influence on Wundt's psychology, philosophy, epistemology and ethics. This can be gleaned from Wundt's Leibniz publication (1917) and from his central terms and principles, but has since received almost no attention. Wundt gave up his plans for a biography of Leibniz, but praised Leibniz's thinking on the two-hundredth anniversary of his death in 1916. He did, however, disagree with Leibniz's monadology as well as theories on the mathematisation of the world by removing the domain of the mind from this view. Leibniz developed a new concept of the soul through his discussion on substance and actuality, on dynamic spiritual change, and on the correspondence between body and soul (parallelism). Wundt secularised such guiding principles and reformulated important philosophical positions of Leibniz away from belief in God as the creator and belief in an immortal soul. Wundt gained important ideas and exploited them in an original way in his principles and methodology of empirical psychology: the principle of actuality, psychophysical parallelism, combination of causal and teleological analysis, apperception theory, the psychology of striving, i.e. volition and voluntary tendency, principles of epistemology and the perspectivism of thought. Wundt's differentiation between the "natural causality" of neurophysiology and the "mental causality" of psychology (the intellect), is a direct rendering from Leibniz's epistemology.
Wundt devised the term psychophysical parallelism and meant thereby two fundamentally different ways of considering the postulated psychophysical unit, not just two views in the sense of Fechner's theory of identity. Wundt derived the co-ordinated consideration of natural causality and mental causality from Leibniz's differentiation between causality and teleology (principle of sufficient reason). The psychological and physiological statements exist in two categorically different reference systems; the main categories are to be emphasised in order to prevent category mistakes. With his epistemology of mental causality, he differed from contemporary authors who also advocated the position of parallelism. Wundt had developed the first genuine epistemology and methodology of empirical psychology.
Wundt shaped the term apperception, introduced by Leibniz, into an experimental psychologically based apperception psychology that included neuropsychological modelling. When Leibniz differentiates between two fundamental functions, perception and striving, this approach can be recognised in Wundt's motivation theory. The central theme of "unity in the manifold" (unitas in multitudine) also originates from Leibniz, who has influenced the current understanding of perspectivism and viewpoint dependency. Wundt characterised this style of thought in a way that also applied for him: "…the principle of the equality of viewpoints that supplement one another" plays a significant role in his thinking – viewpoints that "supplement one another, while also being able to appear as opposites that only resolve themselves when considered more deeply."
Unlike the great majority of contemporary and current authors in psychology, Wundt laid out the philosophical and methodological positions of his work clearly. Wundt was against the founding empirical psychology on a (metaphysical or structural) principle of soul as in Christian belief in an immortal soul or in a philosophy that argues "substance"-ontologically. Wundt's position was decisively rejected by several Christianity-oriented psychologists and philosophers as a psychology without soul, although he did not use this formulation from Friedrich Lange (1866), who was his predecessor in Zürich from 1870 to 1872. Wundt's guiding principle was the development theory of the mind. Wundt's ethics also led to polemical critiques due to his renunciation of an ultimate transcendental basis of ethics (God, the Absolute). Wundt's evolutionism was also criticised for its claim that ethical norms had been culturally changed in the course of human intellectual development.
Wundt's autobiography and his inaugural lectures in Zurich and Leipzig as well as his commemorative speeches for Fechner and his Essay on Leibniz provide an insight into the history of Wundt's education and the contemporary flows and intellectual controversies in the second half of the 19th century. Wundt primarily refers to Leibniz and Kant, more indirectly to Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling and Arthur Schopenhauer; and to Johann Friedrich Herbart, Gustav Theodor Fechner and Hermann Lotze regarding psychology. In addition to John Locke, George Berkeley, David Hume and John Stuart Mill, one finds Francis Bacon, Charles Darwin and Charles Spencer, as well as French thinkers such as Auguste Comte and Hippolyte Taine, all of whom are more rarely quoted by Wundt.
Metaphysics
Wundt distanced himself from the metaphysical term soul and from theories about its structure and properties, as posited by Herbart, Lotze, and Fechner. Wundt followed Kant and warned against a primarily metaphysically founded, philosophically deduced psychology: "where one notices the author's metaphysical point-of-view in the treatment of every problem then an unconditional empirical science is no longer involved – but a metaphysical theory intended to serve as an exemplification of experience." He is, however, convinced that every single science contains general prerequisites of a philosophical nature. "All psychological investigation extrapolates from metaphysical presuppositions." Epistemology was to help sciences find out about, clarify or supplement their metaphysical aspects and as far as possible free themselves of them. Psychology and the other sciences always rely on the help of philosophy here, and particularly on logic and epistemology, otherwise only an immanent philosophy, i.e. metaphysical assumptions of an unsystematic nature, would form in the individual sciences. Wundt is decidedly against the segregation of philosophy. He is concerned about psychologists bringing their own personal metaphysical convictions into psychology and that these presumptions would no longer be exposed to epistemological criticism. "Therefore nobody would suffer more from such a segregation than the psychologists themselves and, through them, psychology." "Nothing would promote the degeneration [of psychology] to a mere craftsmanship more than its segregation from philosophy."
System of philosophy
Wundt claimed that philosophy as a general science has the task of "uniting to become a consistent system through the general knowledge acquired via the individual sciences." Human rationality strives for a uniform, i.e. non-contradictory, explanatory principle for being and consciousness, for an ultimate reasoning for ethics, and for a philosophical world basis. "Metaphysics is the same attempt to gain a binding world view, as a component of individual knowledge, on the basis of the entire scientific awareness of an age or particularly prominent content." Wundt was convinced that empirical psychology also contributed fundamental knowledge on the understanding of humans – for anthropology and ethics – beyond its narrow scientific field. Starting from the active and creative-synthetic apperception processes of consciousness, Wundt considered that the unifying function was to be found in volitional processes and the conscious setting of objectives and subsequent activities. "There is simply nothing more to a man that he can entirely call his own – except for his will." One can detect a "voluntaristic tendency" in Wundt's theory of motivation, in contrast to the currently widespread cognitivism (intellectualism). Wundt extrapolated this empirically founded volitional psychology to a metaphysical voluntarism. He demands, however, that the empirical-psychological and derived metaphysical voluntarism are kept apart from one another and firmly maintained that his empirical psychology was created independently of the various teachings of metaphysics.
Wundt interpreted intellectual-cultural progress and biological evolution as a general process of development whereby, however, he did not want to follow the abstract ideas of entelechy, vitalism, animism, and by no means Schopenhauer's volitional metaphysics. He believed that the source of dynamic development was to be found in the most elementary expressions of life, in reflexive and instinctive behaviour, and constructed a continuum of attentive and apperceptive processes, volitional or selective acts, up to social activities and ethical decisions. At the end of this rational idea he recognised a practical ideal: the idea of humanity as the highest yardstick of our actions and that the overall course of human history can be understood with regard to the ideal of humanity.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODFMelZpTDFCdmNuUnlZV2wwWWlWRE15VkNRM04wWlY4d05qZzJMVGt3WDBZeU1qZ3pPQzVxY0djdk1qSXdjSGd0VUc5eWRISmhhWFJpSlVNekpVSkRjM1JsWHpBMk9EWXRPVEJmUmpJeU9ETTRMbXB3Wnc9PS5qcGc=.jpg)
Ethics
Parallel to Wundt's work on cultural psychology he wrote his much-read Ethik (1886, 3rd ed. in 2 Vols., 1903), whose introduction stressed how important development considerations are in order to grasp religion, customs and morality. Wundt considered the questions of ethics to be closely linked with the empirical psychology of motivated acts "Psychology has been such an important introduction for me, and such an indispensable aid for the investigation of ethics, that I do not understand how one could do without it." Wundt sees two paths: the anthropological examination of the facts of a moral life (in the sense of cultural psychology) and the scientific reflection on the concepts of morals. The derived principles are to be examined in a variety of areas: the family, society, the state, education, etc. In his discussion on free will (as an attempt to mediate between determinism and indeterminism) he categorically distinguishes between two perspectives: there is indeed a natural causality of brain processes, though conscious processes are not determined by an intelligible, but by the empirical character of humans – volitional acts are subject to the principles of mental causality. "When a man only follows inner causality he acts freely in an ethical sense, which is partly determined by his original disposition and partly by the development of his character."
On the one hand, Ethics is a normative discipline while, on the other hand, these 'rules' change, as can be seen from the empirical examination of culture-related morality. Wundt's ethics can, put simply, be interpreted as an attempt to mediate between Kant's apriorism and empiricism. Moral rules are the legislative results of a universal intellectual development, but are neither rigidly defined nor do they simply follow changing life conditions. Individualism and utilitarianism are strictly rejected. In his view, only the universal intellectual life can be considered to be an end in itself. Wundt also spoke on the idea of humanity in ethics, on human rights and human duties in his speech as Rector of Leipzig University in 1889 on the centenary of the French Revolution.
Logic, epistemology and the scientific theory of psychology
Wundt divided up his three-volume Logik into General logic and epistemology, Logic of the exact sciences, and Logic of the humanities. While logic, the doctrine of categories, and other principles were discussed by Wundt in a traditional manner, they were also considered from the point of view of development theory of the human intellect, i.e. in accordance with the psychology of thought. The subsequent equitable description of the special principles of the natural sciences and the humanities enabled Wundt to create a new epistemology. The ideas that remain current include epistemology and the methodology of psychology: the tasks and directions of psychology, the methods of interpretation and comparison, as well as psychological experimentation.
Complete works and legacy
Publications, libraries and letters
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWlMMkkzTDFkMWJtUjBMVkJzWVd0bGRIUmxYMHhsYVhCNmFXY3VkR2xtTDJ4dmMzTjVMWEJoWjJVeExUSXlNSEI0TFZkMWJtUjBMVkJzWVd0bGRIUmxYMHhsYVhCNmFXY3VkR2xtTG1wd1p3PT0uanBn.jpg)
The list of works at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science includes a total of 589 German and foreign-language editions for the period from 1853 to 1950 MPI für Wissenschaftsgeschichte: Werkverzeichnis Wilhelm Wundt.The American psychologist Edwin Boring counted 494 publications by Wundt (excluding pure reprints but with revised editions) that are, on average, 110 pages long and amount to a total of 53,735 pages. Thus Wundt published an average of seven works per year over a period of 68 years and wrote or revised an average of 2.2 pages per day. There is as yet no annotated edition of the essential writings, nor does a complete edition of Wundt's major works exist, apart from more-or-less suitable scans or digitalisations.
Apart from his library and his correspondence, Wundt's extraordinarily extensive written inheritance also includes many extracts, manuscripts, lecture notes and other materials Wundt's written inheritance in Leipzig consists of 5,576 documents, mainly letters, and was digitalised by the Leipzig University Library. The catalogue is available at the Kalliope online portal.
One-third of Wundt's own library was left to his children Eleonore and Max Wundt; most of the works were sold during the times of need after the First World War to Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan. The university's stock consists of 6,762 volumes in western languages (including bound periodicals) as well as 9,098 special print runs and brochures from the original Wundt Library. The list in the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science only mentions 575 of these entries. Tübingen University Archive's stock includes copies of 613 letters, Wundt's will, lists from Wundt's original library, and other materials and 'Wundtiana': The German Historical Museum in Berlin has a 1918 shellac disk on which Wundt repeats the closing words of his inaugural lecture (given in Zürich on 31 October 1874 and re-read in 1918 for documentation purposes): "On the task of philosophy in the present"
Biographies
The last Wundt biography which tried to represent both Wundt's psychology and his philosophy was by Eisler (1902). One can also get an idea of Wundt's thoughts from his autobiography Erlebtes und Erkanntes (1920). Later biographies by Nef (1923) and Petersen (1925) up to Arnold in 1980 restrict themselves primarily to the psychology or the philosophy. Eleonore Wundt's (1928) knowledgeable but short biography of her father exceeds many others' efforts.
Political attitude
At the start of the First World War, Wundt, like Edmund Husserl and Max Planck, signed the patriotic call to arms as did about 4,000 professors and lecturers in Germany, and during the following years he wrote several political speeches and essays that were also characterized by the feeling of a superiority of German science and culture.
During Wundt's early Heidelberg time he espoused liberal views. He co-founded the Association of German Workers' Associations. He was a member of the liberal Progressive Party of Baden. From 1866 to 1869 he represented Heidelberg in the Baden States Assembly.
In old age Wundt appeared to become more conservative (see Wundt, 1920; Wundt's correspondence), then – also in response to World War I, the subsequent social unrest and the severe revolutionary events of the post-war period – adopted an attitude that was patriotic and lent towards nationalism.
Wilhelm Wundt's son, philosopher Max Wundt, had an even more clearly intense, somewhat nationalist, stance. Although not a member of the Nazi party (NSDAP), Max Wundt wrote about national traditions and race in philosophical thinking.
Wundt Societies
Four Wilhelm Wundt Societies or Associations have been founded:
- 1925 to 1968: Wilhelm Wundt Stiftung und Verband Freunde des Psychologischen Instituts der Universität Leipzig, founded by former assistants and friends of Wundts.
- 1979: Wilhelm Wundt Gesellschaft (based in Heidelberg), "a scientific association with a limited number of members set up with the aim of promoting fundamental psychological research and further developing it through its efforts."
- 1992 to 1996: Wundt-Stiftung e.V. und Förderverein Wundt-Stiftung e.V. (based in Bonn/Leipzig).
- 2016: Förderverein Wilhelm-Wundt-Haus in Grossbothen.. The purpose of the association is "the maintenance and restoration of the Wundt home in keeping with its listed building status, as well as its appropriate use". The association was founded on the initiative of Jüttemann (2014).
The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychologie German Society for Psychology grants a Wilhelm-Wundt Medal.
Reception of Wundt's work
This section needs additional citations for verification.(January 2025) |
Reception by his contemporaries
The psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin described the pioneering spirit at the new Leipzig Institute in this fashion: "We felt that we were trailblazers entering virgin territory, like creators of a science with undreamt-of prospects. Wundt spent several afternoons every week in his adjacent modest Professorial office, came to see us, advised us and often got involved in the experiments; he was also available to us at any time."
The philosopher Rudolf Eisler considered Wundt's approach as follows: "A major advantage of Wundt's philosophy is that it neither consciously nor unconsciously takes metaphysics back to its beginnings, but strictly distinguishes between empirical-scientific and epistemological-metaphysical approaches, and considers each point-of-view in isolation in its relative legitimacy before finally producing a uniform world view. Wundt always differentiates between the physical-physiological and the purely psychological, and then again from the philosophical point-of-view. As a result, apparent 'contradictions' are created for those who do not observe more precisely and who constantly forget that the differences in results are only due to the approach and not the laws of reality ..." Traugott Oesterreich (1923/1951) wrote an unusually detailed description of Wundt's work in his (Foundations of the History of Philosophy). This knowledgeable representation examines Wundt's main topics, views and scientific activities and exceeds the generally much briefer Wundt reception within the field of psychology, in which many of the important prerequisites and references are ignored right from the start.
The internal consistency of Wundt's work from 1862 to 1920, between the main works and within the reworked editions, has repeatedly been discussed and been subject to differing assessments in parts. One could not say that the scientific conception of psychology underwent a fundamental revision of principal ideas and central postulates, though there was gradual development and a change in emphasis. One could consider Wundt's gradual concurrence with Kant's position, that conscious processes are not measurable on the basis of self-observation and cannot be mathematically formulated, to be a major divergence. Wundt, however, never claimed that psychology could be advanced through experiment and measurement alone, but had already stressed in 1862 that the development history of the mind and comparative psychology should provide some assistance.
Wundt attempted to redefine and restructure the fields of psychology and philosophy. "Experimental psychology in the narrower sense and child psychology form individual psychology, while cultural and animal psychology are both parts of a general and comparative psychology"). None of his Leipzig assistants and hardly any textbook authors in the subsequent two generations have adopted Wundt's broad theoretical horizon, his demanding scientific theory or the multi-method approach. Oswald Külpe had already ruled cultural and animal psychology out.
While the Principles of physiological Psychology met with worldwide resonance, Wundt's cultural psychology (ethno-psychology) appeared to have had a less widespread impact. But there are indications that George Herbert Mead and Franz Boas, among others, were influenced by it. In his Totem and Taboo, Sigmund Freud frequently quoted Wundt's cultural psychology. In its time, Wundt's Ethik received more reviews than almost any of his other main works. Most of the objections were ranged against his renouncing any ultimate transcendental ethical basis (God, the Absolute), as well as against his ideas regarding evolution, i.e. that ethical standards changed culturally in the course of human intellectual development. As Wundt did not describe any concrete ethical conflicts on the basis of examples and did not describe any social ethics in particular, his teachings with the general idea of humanism appear rather too abstract.
The XXII International Congress for Psychology in Leipzig in 1980, i.e. on the hundredth jubilee of the initial founding of the institute in 1879, stimulated a number of publications about Wundt, also in the US Very little productive research work has been carried out since then. While Wundt was occasionally mentioned in the centenary review of the founding of the German Society for Experimental Psychology 1904/2004, it was without the principal ideas of his psychology and philosophy of science.
Research on reception of his work
Leipzig was a world-famous centre for the new psychology after 1874. There are various interpretations regarding why Wundt's influence after the turn of the century, i.e. during his lifetime, rapidly waned and from his position as founding father Wundt became almost an outsider. A survey was conducted on the basis of more than 200 contemporary and later sources: reviews and critiques of his publications (since 1858), references to Wundt's work in textbooks on psychology and the history of psychology (from 1883 to 2010), biographies, congress reports, praise on his decadal birthdays, obituaries and other texts. A range of scientific controversies were presented in detail. Reasons for the distancing of Wundt and why some of his concepts have fallen into oblivion can be seen in his scientific work, in his philosophical orientation, in his didactics or in the person of Wundt himself:
- Possibly the most important reason for Wundt's relatively low influence might lie in his highly ambitious epistemologically founded conception of psychology, in his theory of science and in the level of difficulty involved in his wide-ranging methodology.
- Most psychologies in the subsequent generation appear to have a considerably simpler, less demanding, philosophical point-of-view instead of coordinated causal and teleological considerations embedded in multiple reference systems that consequently also demanded a multi-method approach. Thus instead of perspectivism and a change in perspective an apparently straightforward approach is preferred, i.e. research oriented upon either the natural sciences or the humanities.
- Wundt's assistants and colleagues, many of whom were also personally close, did not take on the role of students and certainly not the role of interpreters. Oswald Külpe, Ernst Meumann, Hugo Münsterberg or Felix Krueger did not want to, or could not, adequately reference Wundt's comprehensive scientific conception of psychology in their books, for example they almost entirely ignored Wundt's categories and epistemological principles, his strategies in comparison and interpretation, the discussions regarding Kant's in-depth criticism of methodology, and Wundt's neuropsychology. Nobody in this circle developed a creative continuation of Wundt's concepts. Krueger's inner distance to a scientific concept and the entire work of his predecessor cannot be overlooked.
- Through his definition of "soul" as an actual process, Wundt gave up the metaphysical idea of a "substantial carrier"; his psychology without a soul was heavily criticized by several contemporary and later psychologists and philosophers.
- Wundt exposed himself to criticism with his theoretical and experimental psychologically differentiated apperception psychology as opposed to elemental association psychology, and with his comprehensive research programme on a development theory of the human intellect, now seen as an interdisciplinary or trans-disciplinary project.
Misunderstandings of basic terms and principles
Wundt's terminology also created difficulties because he had – from today's point-of-view – given some of his most important ideas unfortunate names so that there were constant misunderstandings. Examples include:
- physiological psychology – specifically not a scientific physiological psychology, because by writing the adjective with a small letter Wundt wanted to avoid this misunderstanding that still exists today; for him it was the use of physiological aids in experimental general psychology that mattered.
- Self-observation – not naive introspection, but with training and experimental control of conditions.
- Experiment – this was meant with reference to Francis Bacon – general, i.e. far beyond the scientific rules of the empirical sciences, so not necessarily a statistically evaluated laboratory experiment. For Wundt psychological experimentation primarily served as a check of trained self-observation.
- Element – not in the sense of the smallest structure, but as a smallest unit of the intended level under consideration, so that, for example, even the central nervous system could be an "element".
- Völkerpsychologie – cultural psychology – not ethnology.
- Apperception – not just an increase in attention, but a central and multimodal synthesis.
- Voluntaristic tendency, voluntarism – not an absolute metaphysical postulate, but a primary empirically psychologically based accentuation of motivated action against the intellectualism and cognitivism of other psychologists.
A representation of Wundt's psychology as 'natural science', 'element psychology' or 'dualistic' conceptions is evidence of enduring misunderstandings. It is therefore necessary to remember Wundt's expressly stated desire for uniformity and lack of contradiction, for the mutual supplementation of psychological perspectives. Wundt's more demanding, sometimes more complicated and relativizing, then again very precise style can also be difficult – even for today's German readers; a high level of linguistic competence is required. There are only English translations for very few of Wundt's work. In particular, the Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie expanded into three volumes and the ten volumes of Völkerpsychologie, all the books on philosophy and important essays on the theory of science remain untranslated.
Such shortcomings may explain many of the fundamental deficits and lasting misunderstandings in the Anglo-American reception of Wundt's work. Massive misconceptions about Wundt's work have been demonstrated by William James, Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Boring and Edward Titchener as well as among many later authors. Titchener, a two-year resident of Wundt's lab and one of Wundt's most vocal advocates in the United States, is responsible for several English translations and mistranslations of Wundt's works that supported his own views and approach, which he termed "structuralism" and claimed was wholly consistent with Wundt's position.
As Wundt's three-volume Logik und Wissenschaftslehre, i.e. his theory of science, also remains untranslated the close interrelationships between Wundt's empirical psychology and his epistemology and methodology, philosophy and ethics are also regularly missing, even if later collections describe individual facets of them. Blumenthal's assessment that "American textbook accounts of Wundt now present highly inaccurate and mythological caricatures of the man and his work" still appears to be true of most publications about Wundt. A highly contradictory picture emerges from any systematic research on his reception. On the one hand, the pioneer of experimental psychology and founder of modern psychology as a discipline is praised, on the other hand, his work is insufficiently tapped and appears to have had little influence. Misunderstandings and stereotypical evaluations continue into the present, even in some representations of the history of psychology and in textbooks. Wundt's entire work is investigated in a more focused manner in more recent assessments regarding the reception of Wundt, and his theory of science and his philosophy is included (Araujo, 2016; Danziger, 1983, 1990, 2001; Fahrenberg, 2011, 2015, 2016; Jüttemann, 2006; Kim, 2016; van Rappard, 1980).
Scientific controversies and criticisms
Like other important psychologists and philosophers, Wundt was subject to ideological criticism, for example by authors of a more Christianity-based psychology, by authors with materialistic and positivistic scientific opinions, or from the point-of-view of Marxist-Leninist philosophy and social theory, as in Leipzig, German Democratic Republic, up to 1990. Wundt was involved in a number of scientific controversies or was responsible for triggering them:
- the Wundt-Zeller controversy about the measurability of awareness processes,
- the Wundt-Meumann controversy about the necessary scope of the scientific principles of applied psychology,
- the Wundt-Bühler controversy about the methodology of the psychology of thought,
- the controversy about the psychology of elemental (passive-mechanic) association and integrative (self-active) apperception,
- the controversy about empirio-criticism, positivism and critical realism, and
- the controversy about psychologism.
There are many forms of criticism of Wundt's psychology, of his apperception psychology, of his motivation theory, of his version of psychophysical parallelism with its concept of "mental causality", his refutation of psychoanalytic speculation about the unconscious, or of his critical realism. A recurring criticism is that Wundt largely ignored the areas of psychology that he found less interesting, such as differential psychology, child psychology and educational psychology. In his cultural psychology there is no empirical social psychology because there were still no methods for investigating it at the time. Among his postgraduate students, assistants and other colleagues, however, were several important pioneers: differential psychology, "mental measurement" and intelligence testing (James McKeen Cattell, Charles Spearman), social psychology of group pocesses and the psychology of work (Walther Moede), applied psychology (Ernst Meumann, Hugo Münsterberg), psychopathology, psychopharmacology and clinical diagnosis (Emil Kraepelin). Wundt further influenced many American psychologists to create psychology graduate programs.
Wundt's excellence
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHlMekl6TDFkcGJHaGxiRzFmVjNWdVpIUWxNa05mVTNSaGRIVmxKVEpEWDFOdmRYUm9kMlZ6ZEY5VmJtbDJaWEp6YVhSNVgwTm9iMjVuY1dsdVp5VXlRMTlEYUdsdVlTNXFjR2N2TVRjd2NIZ3RWMmxzYUdWc2JWOVhkVzVrZENVeVExOVRkR0YwZFdVbE1rTmZVMjkxZEdoM1pYTjBYMVZ1YVhabGNuTnBkSGxmUTJodmJtZHhhVzVuSlRKRFgwTm9hVzVoTG1wd1p3PT0uanBn.jpg)
Southwest University Chongqing, China
This section does not cite any sources.(January 2025) |
Wundt developed the first comprehensive and uniform theory of the science of psychology. The special epistemological and methodological status of psychology is postulated in this wide-ranging conceptualization, characterized by his neurophysiological, psychological and philosophical work. The human as a thinking and motivated subject is not to be captured in the terms of the natural sciences. Psychology requires special categories and autonomous epistemological principles. It is, on the one hand, an empirical humanity but should not, on the other hand, ignore its physiological basis and philosophical assumptions. Thus a varied, multi-method approach is necessary: self-observation, experimentation, generic comparison and interpretation. Wundt demanded the ability and readiness to distinguish between perspectives and reference systems, and to understand the necessary supplementation of these reference systems in changes of perspective. He defined the field of psychology very widely and as interdisciplinary, and also explained just how indispensable is the epistemological-philosophical criticism of psychological theories and their philosophical prerequisites. Psychology should remain connected with philosophy in order to promote this critique of knowledge of the metaphysical presuppositions so widespread among psychologists.
The conceptual relationships within the complete works created over decades and continuously reworked have hardly been systematically investigated. The most important theoretical basis is the empirical-psychological theory of apperception, based on Leibniz's philosophical position, that Wundt, on the one hand, based on experimental psychology and his neuropsychological modelling and, on the other hand, extrapolated into a development theory for culture. The fundamental reconstruction of Wundt's main ideas is a task that cannot be achieved by any one person today due to the complexity of the complete works. He tried to connect the fundamental controversies of the research directions epistemologically and methodologically by means of a co-ordinated concept – in a confident handling of the categorically basically different ways of considering the interrelations. Here, during the founding phase of university psychology, he already argued for a highly demanding meta-science meta-scientific reflection – and this potential to stimulate interdisciplinarity und perspectivism (complementary approaches) has by no means been exhausted.
Selected works
Books and articles
- Lehre von der Muskelbewegung (The Patterns of Muscular Movement), (Vieweg, Braunschweig 1858).
- Die Geschwindigkeit des Gedankens (The Velocity of Thought), (Die Gartenlaube 1862, Vol 17, p. 263).
- Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung (Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception), (Winter, Leipzig 1862).
- Vorlesungen über die Menschen- und Tierseele (Lectures about Human and Animal Psychology), (Voss, Leipzig Part 1 and 2, 1863/1864; 4th revised ed. 1906).
- Lehrbuch der Physiologie des Menschen (Textbook of Human Physiology), (Enke, Erlangen 1864/1865, 4th ed. 1878).
- Die physikalischen Axiome und ihre Beziehung zum Causalprincip (Physical Axioms and their Bearing upon Causality Principles), (Enke, Erlangen 1866).
- Handbuch der medicinischen Physik (Handbook of Medical Physics), (Enke, Erlangen 1867). (Digitalisat und Volltext im Deutschen Textarchiv)
- Untersuchungen zur Mechanik der Nerven und Nervenzentren (Investigations upon the Mechanisms of Nerves and Nerve-Centres), (Enke, Erlangen 1871–1876).
- Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie (Principles of physiological Psychology), (Engelmann, Leipzig 1874; 5th ed. 1902–1903; 6th ed. 1908–1911, 3 Vols).
- Über die Aufgabe der Philosophie in der Gegenwart. Rede gehalten zum Antritt des öffentlichen Lehramts der Philosophie an der Hochschule in Zürich am 31. Oktober 1874. (On the Task of Philosophy in the present), (Philosophische Monatshefte. 1874, Vol 11, pp. 65–68).
- Über den Einfluss der Philosophie auf die Erfahrungswissenschaften. Akademische Antrittsrede gehalten in Leipzig am 20. November 1875. (On the Impact of Philosophy on the empirical Sciences), (Engelmann, Leipzig 1876).
- Der Spiritismus – eine sogenannte wissenschaftliche Frage. (Spiritism – a so-called scientific Issue), (Engelmann: Leipzig 1879).
- Logik. Eine Untersuchung der Principien der Erkenntnis und der Methoden wissenschaftlicher Forschung. (Logic. An investigation into the principles of knowledge and the methods of scientific research), (Enke, Stuttgart 1880–1883; 4th ed. 1919–1921, 3 Vols.).
- Ueber die Messung psychischer Vorgänge. (On the measurement of mental events). (Philosophische Studien. 1883, Vol 1, pp. 251–260, pp. 463–471).
- Ueber psychologische Methoden. (On psychological Methods). (Philosophische Studien. 1883, Vol 1, pp. 1–38).
- Essays (Engelmann, Leipzig 1885).
- Ethik. Eine Untersuchung der Tatsachen und Gesetze des sittlichen Lebens. (Ethics), (Enke, Stuttgart 1886; 3rd ed. 1903, 2 Vols.).
- Über Ziele und Wege der Völkerpsychologie. (On Aims and Methods of Cultural Psychology). (Philosophische Studien. 1888, Vol 4, pp. 1–27).
- System der Philosophie (System of Philosophy), (Engelmann, Leipzig 1889: 4th ed. 1919, 2 Vols.).
- Grundriss der Psychologie (Outline of Psychology), (Engelmann, Leipzig 1896; 14th ed. 1920).
- Über den Zusammenhang der Philosophie mit der Zeitgeschichte. Eine Centenarbetrachtung. (On the Relation between Philosophy and contemporary History). Rede des antretenden Rectors Dr. phil., jur. et med. Wilhelm Wundt. F. Häuser (Hrsg.): Die Leipziger Rektoratsreden 1871–1933. Vol I: Die Jahre 1871–1905 (pp. 479–498). Berlin: (de Gruyter (1889/2009).
- Hypnotismus und Suggestion. (Hypnotism and Suggestion). (Engelmann: Leipzig 1892).
- Ueber psychische Causalität und das Princip des psycho-physischen Parallelismus. (On mental Causality and the Principle of psycho-physical Parallelism). (Philosophische Studien. 1894, Vol 10, pp. 1–124).
- Ueber die Definition der Psychologie (On the Definition of Psychology). (Philosophische Studien. 1896, Vol 12, pp. 9–66).
- Über naiven und kritischen Realismus I–III. (On naive and critical Realism). (Philosophische Studien. 1896–1898, Vol 12, pp. 307–408; Vol 13, pp. 1–105, pp. 323–433).
- Völkerpsychologie (Cultural Psychology), 10 Volumes, Vol. 1, 2. Die Sprache (Language); Vol. 3. Die Kunst (Art); Vol 4, 5, 6. Mythos und Religion (Myth and Religion); Vol 7, 8. Die Gesellschaft (Society); Vol 9. Das Recht (Right); Vol 10. Kultur und Geschichte (Culture and History). (Engelmann, Leipzig 1900 to 1920; some vol. revised or reprinted, 3rd ed.1919 ff; 4th ed. 1926).
- Einleitung in die Philosophie (Introduction to Philosophy), (Engelmann, Leipzig 1909; 8th ed. 1920).
- Gustav Theodor Fechner. Rede zur Feier seines hundertjährigen Geburtstags. (Engelmann, Leipzig 1901).
- Über empirische und metaphysische Psychologie (On empirical and metaphysical Psychology). (Archiv für die gesamte Psychologie. 1904, Vol 2, pp. 333–361).
- Über Ausfrageexperimente und über die Methoden zur Psychologie des Denkens. (Psychologische Studien. 1907, Vol 3, pp. 301–360).
- Kritische Nachlese zur Ausfragemethode. (Archiv für die gesamte Psychologie. 1908, Vol 11, pp. 445–459).
- Über reine und angewandte Psychologie (On pure and applied Psychology). (Psychologische Studien. 1909, Vol 5, pp. 1–47).
- Das Institut für experimentelle Psychologie. In: Festschrift zur Feier des 500 jährigen Bestehens der Universität Leipzig, ed. by Rektor und Senat der Universität Leipzig, 1909, 118–133. (S. Hirzel, Leipzig 1909).
- Psychologismus und Logizismus (Psychologism and Logizism). Kleine Schriften. Vol 1 (pp. 511–634). (Engelmann, Leipzig 1910).
- Kleine Schriften (Shorter Writings), 3 Volumes, (Engelmann, Leipzig 1910–1911).
- Einführung in die Psychologie. (Dürr, Leipzig 1911).
- Probleme der Völkerpsychologie (Problems in Cultural Psychology). (Wiegandt, Leipzig 1911).
- Elemente der Völkerpsychologie. Grundlinien einer psychologischen Entwicklungsgeschichte der Menschheit. (Elements of Cultural Psychology), (Kröner, Leipzig 1912).
- Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein (Psychology's Struggle for Existence). (Kröner, Leipzig 1913).
- Reden und Aufsätze. (Addresses and Extracts). (Kröner, Leipzig 1913).
- Sinnliche und übersinnliche Welt (The Sensory and Supersensory World), (Kröner, Leipzig 1914).
- Über den wahrhaften Krieg (About the Real War), (Kröner, Leipzig 1914).
- Die Nationen und ihre Philosophie (Nations and Their Philosophies), (Kröner, Leipzig 1915).
- Völkerpsychologie und Entwicklungspsychologie (Cultural Psychology and Developmental Psychology). . (Psychologische Studien. 1916, 10, 189–238).
- Leibniz. Zu seinem zweihundertjährigen Todestag. 14. November 1916. (Kröner Verlag, Leipzig 1917).
- Die Weltkatastrophe und die deutsche Philosophie . (Keysersche Buchhandlung, Erfurt 1920).
- Erlebtes und Erkanntes. (Experience and Realization). (Kröner, Stuttgart 1920).
- Kleine Schriften. Vol 3. (Kröner, Stuttgart 1921).
Wundt's works in English
References given by Alan Kim Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt
- 1974The Language of Gestures. Ed. Blumenthal, A.L. Berlin: De Gruyter
- 1973An Introduction to Psychology. New York: Arno Press
- 1969?Outlines of Psychology. 1897. Tr. Judd, C.H. St. Clair Shores, MI: Scholarly Press
- 1916Elements of Folk Psychology. Tr. Schaub, E.L. London: Allen (idem)
- 1901The Principles of Morality and the Departments of the Moral Life. Trans. Washburn, M.F. London: Swan Sonnenschein; New York: Macmillan
- 1896 (2nd ed.) Lectures on human and animal psychology. Creighton, J.G., Titchener, E.B., trans. London: Allen. Translation of Wundt, 1863
- 1893 (3rd ed.) Principles of physiological psychology. Titchener, E.B., trans. London: Allen. Translation of Wundt, 1874. [New York, 1904]
See also
- Anti-psychologism
Notes
- The main part of the inscription is:
WILHELM WUNDT
geboren 16. August 1832 in Neckarau bei Mannheim
gestorben 31. August 1920 in Großbothen bei Leipzig
Gott ist Geist und die ihn anbeten
müssen ihn im Geist und in der Wahrheit anbeten.
SOPHIE WUNDT
GEB[oren], MAU
geboren 23. Januar 1844 in Kiel
gestorben 15. April 1914 in Leipzig
Gott ist die Liebe und wer in Liebe bleibt
der bleibt in Gott und Gott in ihm.
A translation is:
WILHELM WUNDT
born 16 August 1832 in Neckarau in Mannheim[,]
died 31 August 1920 in Großbothen in Leipzig[.]
God is Spirit and they that worship him
must worship him in spirit and in truth.
SOPHIE Wundt
NÉE, MAU
born 23 January 18, 1844 in Kiel[,]
died 15 April 1914 in Leipzig[.]
God is love and who abides in love
abides in God and God in him.
References
- Neil Carlson, Donald C. Heth: Psychology the Science of Behaviour. Pearson Education Inc. 2010. ISBN 0-205-54786-9. p. 18.
- Kim, Alan (2022), "Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt", in Zalta, Edward N.; Nodelman, Uri (eds.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2022 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 5 March 2023
- Butler-Bowdon, Tom (2007). 50 Psychology Classics: Who We Are, How We Think, What We Do: Insight and Inspiration from 50 Key Books. Nicholas Brealey Publishing. p. 2. ISBN 978-1-85788-473-9.
- Wundt: Das Institut für experimentelle Psychologie. Leipzig, 1909, 118–133.
- Fahrenberg, Jochen (2019). Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) (PDF). PsychArchives. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
- J. H. Korn, R. Davis, S. F. Davis: "Historians' and chairpersons' judgements of eminence among psychologists". American Psychologist, 1991, Volume 46, pp. 789–792.
- Lamberti, 1995, pp. 15–22.
- Craig, Gordon Alexander (22 October 1999). Germany, 1866–1945. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
- Wundt, Wilhelm (1856). Untersuchungen über das Verhalten der Nerven in entzündeten und degenerirten Organen [Research on the behaviour of nerves in burned and degenerating organs] (MD thesis). University of Frieburg.
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ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Lamberti, 1995, pp. 81–86, pp. 114–134.
- Lamberti, 1995, pp. 87–113.
- Robinson, David (Autumn 2017). "David K. Robinson on an important meeting of minds at Leipzig University". Founding Fathers. 23: 976–977. Archived from the original on 12 August 2013 – via google scholar.
- Wontorra: Frühe apparative Psychologie, 2009.
- Anneros Meischner-Metge: Wilhelm Wundt und seine Schüler. In: Horst-Peter Brauns (Ed.): Zentenarbetrachtungen. Historische Entwicklungen in der neueren Psychologie bis zum Ende des 20. Jahrhunderts. Peter Lang, Frankfurt a.M. 2003, pp. 156–166.
- Wundt: Das Institut für experimentelle Psychologie, 1909, 118–133.
- Bringmann, Ungerer (1990). "The Foundation of the Institute for Experimental Psychology at Leipzig University". Psychological Research. 42: 13.
- "Homepage des Instituts für Psychologie an der Universität Leipzig". psychologie.biphaps.uni-leipzig.de. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
- J. Ben-David, R. Collins: Social factors in the origins of a new science: The case of psychology. American Sociological Review, 1966, Volume 31, 451–465.
- Sprung: Wilhelm Wundt – Bedenkenswertes und Bedenkliches aus seinem Lebenswerk. 1979, pp. 73–82.
- Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt – Pionier der Psychologie und Außenseiter? Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte, 2011.
- Bringmann, W. G.; Balance, W. D. G.; Evans, R. B. (1975). "Wilhelm Wundt 1832–1920: A brief biographical sketch". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 11 (3): 287–297. doi:10.1002/1520-6696(197507)11:3<287::AID-JHBS2300110309>3.0.CO;2-L. PMID 11609842.
- Wirth, W. (1920). "Unserem grossen Lehrer Wilhelm Wundt in unauslöschlicher Dankbarkeit zum Gedächtnis!" [In eternal gratitude to the memory of our great teacher Wilhelm Wundt!]. Archiv für die gesamte Psychologie (in German). 40: 1–16.
- "Nomination Archive". Nobel Prize. April 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
- "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- "Wilhelm Wundt". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- Kurt Danziger(1980): On the threshold of the New Psychology: Situating Wundt and James. In: W. G. Bringmann, E. D. Tweney (Eds.): Wundt Studies. A Centennial Collection (pp. 362–379). Hogrefe: Toronto.
- Tweeny, D., Yachanin, S. A. (1980): Titchener's Wundt. (S. 380–395). In: W. G. Bringmann, E. D. Tweney (Eds.). Wundt Studies. A Centennial Collection (pp. 380–395). Hogrefe: Toronto.
- Fahrenberg, Jochen (2011). "Wilhelm Wundt — Pionier der Psychologie und Außenseiter? Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte" [Wilhelm Wundt — pioneer in psychology and outsider? Basic concepts and their reception] (in German). Leibniz Institut für Psychologie (ZPID). doi:10.23668/psycharchives.10417.
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(help) - Carpenter, Shana K. (August 2005). "Some Neglected Contributions of Wilhelm Wundt to the Psychology of Memory". Psychological Reports. 97 (1): 63–73. doi:10.2466/pr0.97.1.63-73. ISSN 0033-2941. PMID 16279306. S2CID 575658.
- Wundt: Grundriss der Psychologie, 1920, S. 393.
- Wundt: Ueber psychische Causalität und das Princip des psycho-physischen Parallelismus, 1894
- Wundt: Logik. 1921, Band 3, S. 15–19.
- Fahrenberg: Zur Kategorienlehre der Psychologie, 2013, S. 86–131.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Band 3, S. 769.
- G. W. Leibniz: Die Prinzipien der Philosophie und Monadologie (Les principles de la philosophie ou la monadologie. 1714/1720). In: Thomas Leinkauf (Hrsg.): Leibniz. Eugen Diederichs Verlag, München 1996, S. 406–424).
- Wundt, 1894; 1897; 1902–1903, Volume 3.
- Nicolai Hartmann. Der Aufbau der realen Welt. Grundriss der allgemeinen Kategorienlehre. De Gruyter, Berlin 1940, 2nd ed. 1949, pp.87 ff.)
- Wundt: Über naiven und kritischen Realismus, 1896–1898.
- Wundt: Über die Definition der Psychologie, 1896, pp. 21.
- Wundt: Über empirische und metaphysische Psychologie, 1904, pp. 336.
- Wundt: Grundriss der Psychologie, 1920, 14th ed. p. 14.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Volume 3, S. 777.
- Saulo de F. Araujo: Why did Wundt abandon his early theory of the unconscious? 2012, Volume 15, pp. 33–49.
- Saulo de F. Araujo: Wundt and the Philosophical Foundations of Psychology. A Reappraisal. 2016.
- Christfried Tögel: Freud und Wundt. Von der Hypnose bis zur Völkerpsychologie. In: B. Nitzschke (Ed.). Freud und die akademische Psychologie. Urban & Schwarzenberg: München: 1989, pp. 97–105.
- Fahrenberg: Theoretische Psychologie, 2015, pp. 310–314.
- Wundt: Grundriss der Psychologie, 1920, 14th ed., pp. 18 f.
- Wundt: Völkerpsychologie, 1900, Volume 1, p. 15; Wundt: Logik, 1921, Volume 3, p. 297.
- Wundt: Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung, 1862, p. XI.
- Wundt: Beiträge, 1862, p. XVI.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1874, p. 1.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1874, p. 858.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1874, pp. 2–3.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902, Volume 2, pp. 263–369.
- Wundt, 1863, p. IX.
- Wundt Völkerpsychologie, 1911, 3rd ed. Vol. 1, p. 1.
- Wundt, Völkerpsychologie. Vol. 10, p. 189.
- Wundt, Völkerpsychologie. Vol. 10, p. 195.
- Tr. Schaub, E.L. Allen, London 1916.
- Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie (Völkerpsychologie), 2016b.
- Ziche: Neuroscience in its context, 1999.
- Fahrenberg: Wundts Neuropsychologie, 2015b.
- Ch. S. Sherrington: The integrative Action of the Nervous System. Henry Frowde, London 1911.
- Wundt: Logik, 1921, 4th ed., Volume 3, p. 51.
- Wundt, 1907, 1908, 1921.
- Immanuel Kant: Anthropologie in pragmatischer Hinsicht. Schriften zur Anthropologie, Geschichtsphilosophie, Politik und Pädagogik. (Immanuel Kant Werkausgabe. Band 6). hrsg. von Wilhelm Weischedel. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1798/1983, pp. 395–690.
- Wundt: Grundzüge 1874, pp. 5–8.
- Fahrenberg: Theoretische Psychologie, 2015a, pp. 115–126; pp. 228–234.
- Wundt. Grundzüge, 1908–1910.
- Wontorra, 2009.
- Wundt, 1921, pp. 62 ff, 238 f; 1920a, p. 372.)
- Wundt: Logik, 1921, 4th ed., Volume 3, p. 297.
- Wundt: Vorlesungen über Menschen- und Tierseele, 1863, Volume 1, p. 435 f.
- Wundt: Erlebtes und Erkanntes, 1920, p. 183.
- Wundt: Grundriss der Psychologie, 1920, p. 401.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Volume 3, S. 785.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Volume 3, p. 789.
- Wundt: Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Volume 3.
- Meischner-Metge: Die Methode der Forschung, 2006, pp. 131–143.
- Fahrenberg, 2016b.
- Wundt: Grundzüge,1874, Chapter 19.
- Fahrenberg, 2016a.
- Fahrenberg 2016a.
- Fahrenberg: Zur Kategorienlehre, 2013, S. 288–296.
- Wundt: Leibniz, 1917, S.117.
- reception analysis, see Fahrenberg 2011, 2015a.
- Wundt: Erlebtes und Erkanntes, 1920
- Wundt, 1874; Wundt, 1875.
- Wundt, 1901.
- Wundt, 1917
- Araoujo, 2016; Fahrenberg, 2016a.
- Wundt: Grundriss der Psychologie, 1896, p. 22.
- Wundt: System der Philosophie, 1919, Volume 1, pp. IX f.
- Wundt, System der Philosophie, 1897, p. 33.
- Wundt: Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein. 1913, p. 24.
- Wundt: Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein. 1913, p. 37.
- Wundt: System der Philosophie, 1919, Volume 1, p. 17.
- Wundt: System der Philosophie, 1897, p. 377.
- Wundt: System der Philosophie, 1919, Volume 1, p. IX f.
- Wundt: Ethik, 1886, p. 577.
- (Grundzüge, 1902–1903, Vol. 3.
- Wundt: Ethik, 1886, Vorwort p. III.
- Wundt: Ethik, 1886, p. 410.
- Boring: A history of experimental psychology (2nd ed.), 1950, p. 345.
- Fahrenberg, 2016; Meyer, 2015; Ungerer, 2016.
- M. Takasuma: The Wundt Collection in Japan. In: R.W. Rieber, D. K. Robinson (Hrsg.): Wilhelm Wundt in history: The making of a scientific psychology. Kluwer-Academic, New York 2001, pp. 251–258.
- Wade, N. J.; Sakurai, K.; Gyoba, J. Jiro (2007). "Guest editorial essay. Whither Wundt?". Perception. 36 (2): 163–166. doi:10.1068/p3602ed. PMID 17402661.
- Inventory UAT 228 with inventory lists UAT 228/16 to 228/24.
- Signature T90/447, length of recording is 2 minutes.
- Mark Michalski: Der Gang des deutschen Denkens. Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 2010.
- Emil Kraepelin: Nachruf Wilhelm Wundt. Zeitschrift für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie 1920, Volume 61, 351–362.
- Rudolf Eisler: W. Wundts Philosophie und Psychologie, 1902, p. 13.
- Araujo, 2016; Fahrenberg, 2011, 2015, 2016; Graumann, 1980; Jüttemann 2006.
- Wundt: Beiträge, 1862, p. XIV.
- Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt, 2011, S. 14–16.
- Paul Ziche: Wissenschaftslandschaften um 1900: Philosophie, die Wissenschaften und der nichtreduktive Szientismus, 2008.
- Wundt 1902, p. 6.
- Külpe, 1893, p. 7ff.
- Eckardt, 1997; Graumann, 2006.
- Wolfgang G. Bringmann, Ryan D. Tweney (Eds.): Wundt studies, 1980; Wolfgang G. Bringmann, Eckart Scheerer (Eds.): Wundt centennial issue, 1980, Volume 42, pp. 1–189; Robert W. Rieber, David K. Robinson (Eds.): Wilhelm Wundt in history: The making of a scientific psychology, 2001.
- Thomas Rammsayer, Stefan Troche (Eds.): Reflexionen der Psychologie. 100 Jahre Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychologie. Bericht über den 44. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie in Göttingen 2004. Hogrefe: Göttingen 2005.
- Felix Krueger: Eröffnung des XIII. Kongresses. Die Lage der Seelenwissenschaft in der deutschen Gegenwart. In: Otto Klemm (Hrsg.): Bericht über den XIII. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie in Leipzig vom 16.–19. Oktober 1933. Fischer, Jena 1934, pp. 6–36.
- Wundt: Über Ausfrageexperimente, 1907, p. 301ff
- Bringmann et al., 1980.
- Arthur L. Blumenthal: Wilhelm Wundt – Problems of interpretation. In: W.G. Bringmann, E.D. Tweney. (Eds.). Wundt Studies. A Centennial Collection. Hogrefe, Toronto 1980, pp. 435–445.
Sources
Biographies
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- Edmund König: Wilhelm Wundt als Psycholog und als Philosoph. Fromman, Stuttgart 1901.
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Contemporary sources
- Eduard von Hartmann: Die moderne Psychologie. Eine kritische Geschichte der deutschen Psychologie in der zweiten Hälfte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Haacke, Leipzig 1901.
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- Otto Klemm: Zur Geschichte des Leipziger Psychologischen Instituts. In: A. Hoffmann-Erfurt (Hrsg.): Wilhelm Wundt. Eine Würdigung. 2. Auflage. Stenger, Erfurt 1924, pp. 93–101.
- Felix Krueger: Eröffnung des XIII. Kongresses. Die Lage der Seelenwissenschaft in der deutschen Gegenwart. In: Otto Klemm (Hrsg.): Bericht über den XIII. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie in Leipzig vom 16.–19. Oktober 1933. Fischer, Jena 1934, pp. 6–36.
- Leonore Wundt: Wilhelm Wundts Werke. Ein Verzeichnis seiner sämtlichen Schriften. Beck, München, 1927.
Recent sources
- Araujo, Saulo de Freitas (2012). "Why did Wundt abandon his early theory of the unconscious? Towards a new interpretation of Wundt's psychological project". History of Psychology. 15 (1): 33–49. doi:10.1037/a0024478. PMID 22530377.
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- Bringmann, Wolfgang G.; Scheerer, Eckart (1980). "Preface". Psychological Research. 42 (1–2): i-4. doi:10.1007/BF00308687.
- Wolfgang G. Bringmann, N. J. Bringmann, W. D. Balance: Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt 1832 – 1874: The formative years. In: W.G. Bringmann, R. D. Tweney (Eds.). Wundt studies. A centennial Collection. Hogrefe, Toronto 1980, pp. 12–32.
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- Kurt Danziger: On the threshold of the New Psychology: Situating Wundt and James. In: W.G. Bringmann, E. D. Tweney (Eds.). Wundt Studies. A Centennial Collection. Hogrefe, Toronto, 1980, pp. 362–379.
- Danziger, Kurt (1990). Constructing the Subject. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511524059. ISBN 978-0-521-36358-7.
- Danziger, Kurt (2001). "Wundt and the Temptations of Psychology". Wilhelm Wundt in History. Path in Psychology. pp. 69–94. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-0665-2_2. ISBN 978-1-4613-5184-9.
- Georg Eckardt (Ed.): Völkerpsychologie - Versuch einer Neuentdeckung. Psychologie Verlags Union, Weinheim 1997.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt - Pionier der Psychologie und Außenseiter? Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte. (Wilhelm Wundt – pioneer in psychology and outsider? Basic concepts and their reception) e-book, 2011. PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt — Pionier der Psychologie und Außenseiter? Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte
- Fahrenberg, Jochen (2012). "Wilhelm Wundts Wissenschaftstheorie der Psychologie". Psychologische Rundschau. 63 (4): 228–238. doi:10.1026/0033-3042/a000141.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Zur Kategorienlehre der Psychologie. Komplementaritätsprinzip. Perspektiven und Perspektiven-Wechsel.(On categories in psychology. Complementarity principle, perspectives, and perspective-taking). Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich 2013, ISBN 978-3-89967-891-8. PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt — Pionier der Psychologie und Außenseiter? Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Theoretische Psychologie – Eine Systematik der Kontroversen (Theoretical psychology – A system of controversies). Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich 2015a. ISBN 978-3-95853-077-5. PsyDok ZPID Theoretische Psychologie – Eine Systematik der Kontroversen
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundts Neuropsychologie (Wilhelm Wundt's neuropsychology). D. Emmans & A. Laihinen (Eds.). Comparative Neuropsychology and Brain Imaging: Commemorative publication in honour of Prof. Dr. Ulrike Halsband. LIT-Verlag, Vienna 2015b, ISBN 978-3-643-90653-3. pp. 348–373.
- Fahrenberg, Jochen (2016). "Leibniz' Einfluss auf Wundts Psychologie und Philosophie". Psychologische Rundschau. 67 (4): 276. doi:10.1026/0033-3042/a000332.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie (Völkerpsychologie): Eine Psychologische Entwicklungstheorie des Geistes (Wilhelm Wundt's cultural psychology: A psychological theory on the development of mind). (2016b) PsyDok Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie (Völkerpsychologie): Eine Psychologische Entwicklungstheorie des Geistes
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wundt-Nachlass (2016c). PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundts Nachlass. Eine Übersicht.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Gesamtwerk: Einführung, Zitate, Rezeption, Kommentare, Rekonstruktionsversuche. Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich 2018. ISBN 978-3-95853-435-3. PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Gesamtwerk: Einführung, Zitate, Kommentare, Rezeption, Rekonstruktionsversuche.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Introduction, Quotations, Reception, Commentaries, Attempts at Reconstruction. Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich 2020. ISBN 978-3-95853-574-9. PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Introduction, Quotations, Reception, Commentaries, Attempts at Reconstruction.
- Jochen Fahrenberg: Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Eine Centenarbetrachtung (Ein Rückblick auf das Werk von Wilhelm Wundt und dessen Rezeption und Aktualität.) https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5580 (PDF; 1,09 MB). 2022.
- Graumann, Carl F. (1980). "Experiment, Statistik, Geschichte. Wundts erstes Heidelberger Programm einer Psychologie". Psychologische Rundschau. 31: 73–83.
- Carl F. Graumann: Die Verbindung und Wechselwirkung der Individuen im Gemeinschaftsleben. In: Gerd Jüttemann (Ed.): Wilhelm Wundts anderes Erbe. Ein Missverständnis löst sich auf. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2006, pp. 52–68.
- Hildebrandt, H. (1989). Psychophysischer Parallelismus. In: J. Ritte, K. Gründer (Hrsg.). Historisches Wörterbuch der Philosophie. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1989, Volume 7, pp. 101–107.
- Willem Van Hoorn, T. Verhave: Wilhelm Wundts"s conception of his multiple foundations of scientific psychology. In W. Meischner, A. Metge (Hrsg.). Wilhelm Wundt – progressives Erbe, Wissenschaftsentwicklung und Gegenwart. Protokoll des internationalen Symposiums. Karl-Marx-Universität Leipzig, 1979. Pahl-Rugenstein, Köln 1980, pp. 107–117.
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- Alan Kim: "Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2016 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt
- Friedrich A. Lange: Geschichte des Materialismus und Kritik seiner Bedeutung in der Gegenwart. (8. erw. Aufl. 1908, hrsg. und bearbeitet von Hermann Cohen). Baedeker, Iserlohn 1866.
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- Anneros Meischner-Metge: Wilhelm Wundt und seine Schüler. In: Horst-Peter Brauns (Ed.): Zentenarbetrachtungen. Historische Entwicklungen in der neueren Psychologie bis zum Ende des 20. Jahrhunderts. Peter Lang, Frankfurt a.M. 2003, pp. 156–166.
- Anneros Meischner-Metge: Die Methode der Forschung. In: G. Jüttemann (Hrsg.): Wilhelm Wundts anderes Erbe. Ein Missverständnis löst sich auf. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2006, pp. 131–143.
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- Rappard, H. V. (1980). "A monistic interpretation of Wundt's psychology". Psychological Research. 42 (1–2): 123–134. doi:10.1007/BF00308697. S2CID 143838892.
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- Maximilian Wontorra: Frühe apparative Psychologie. Der Andere Verlag, Leipzig 2009.
- Maximilian Wontorra, Ingrid Kästner, Erich Schröger (Hrsg.): Wilhelm Wundts Briefwechsel. Institut für Psychologie. Leipzig 2011.
- Maximilian Wontorra, Anneros Meischner-Metge, Erich Schröger (Hrsg.): Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) und die Anfänge der experimentellen Psychologie. Institut für Psychologie. Leipzig 2004. ISBN 3-00-013477-8.
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- Paul Ziche: Wissenschaftslandschaften um 1900: Philosophie, die Wissenschaften und der nichtreduktive Szientismus. Chronos, Zürich 2008.
External links
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Wilhelm Wundt
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- Works by and about Wilhelm Wundt in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library)
- Max Planck Institute for the History of Science: Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt.
- Biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
- Wilhelm Wundt Bibliography 589 entries
- Nachlass von Wilhelm Wundt im Kalliope-Verbund
- Universität Leipzig: Wilhelm Wundt
- Universität Leipzig: Wilhelm Wundt und die Anfänge der experimentellen Psychologie.
- Universität Heidelberg: Wilhelm Wundt und die Institutionalisierung der Psychologie.
- Wundt's Lectures at the University of Zürich 1874–1875
- Wundt's Lectures at the University of Leipzig
- Alan Kim: Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt.
Works online
- Grundzüge der physiologischen Psychologie.
- Grundriss der Psychologie.
- Wilhelm Wundt: Erlebtes und Erkanntes
- Works by Wilhelm Wundt at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Wilhelm Wundt at the Internet Archive
- Wilhelm Wundt and the making of a scientific psychology
Earlier translations online
Caution: Earlier translations of Wundt's publications are of a highly questionable reliability.
- Principles of Physiological Psychology
- Outlines of Psychology
- Ethics: An Investigation of the Facts and Laws of the Moral Life. Volume 1. (Tr. Edward B. Titchener et al..) Second Edition, 1902. University of Michigan.
- Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology. (Trs. Edward B. Titchener and James E. Creighton.) Second Edition, 1896. Harvard.Fourth Edition, 1907. Stanford; UCLA; University of Illinois.
- Outlines of Psychology. (Tr. Charles Hubbard Judd.) Second Edition, 1902. Stanford.
- Principles of Physiological Psychology. Volume 1. (Tr. Edward B. Titchener.)First Edition, 1904. Harvard; Lane; University of Michigan; HTML. Second Edition, 1910. UCLA.
The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt w ʊ n t German vʊnt 16 August 1832 31 August 1920 was a German physiologist philosopher and professor one of the fathers of modern psychology Wundt who distinguished psychology as a science from philosophy and biology was the first person to call himself a psychologist Wilhelm WundtWundt in 1902BornWilhelm Maximilian Wundt 1832 08 16 16 August 1832 Neckarau near Mannheim Grand Duchy of Baden German ConfederationDied31 August 1920 1920 08 31 aged 88 Grossbothen Saxony GermanyEducationUniversity of Heidelberg MD 1856 Known forExperimental psychology Cultural psychology ApperceptionScientific careerFieldsExperimental psychology Cultural psychology philosophy physiologyInstitutionsUniversity of LeipzigThesisUntersuchungen uber das Verhalten der Nerven in entzundeten und degenerierten Organen Research of the Behaviour of Nerves in Inflamed and Degenerated Organs 1856 Doctoral advisorKarl Ewald HasseOther academic advisorsHermann von Helmholtz Johannes Peter MullerDoctoral studentsJames McKeen Cattell G Stanley Hall Oswald Kulpe Hugo Munsterberg Ljubomir Nedic Walter Dill Scott George M Stratton Edward B Titchener Lightner Witmer He is widely regarded as the father of experimental psychology In 1879 at the University of Leipzig Wundt founded the first formal laboratory for psychological research This marked psychology as an independent field of study He also established the first academic journal for psychological research Philosophische Studien from 1883 to 1903 followed by Psychologische Studien from 1905 to 1917 to publish the institute s research A survey published in American Psychologist in 1991 ranked Wundt s reputation as first for all time eminence based on ratings provided by 29 American historians of psychology William James and Sigmund Freud were ranked a distant second and third BiographyEarly life Wundt was born at Neckarau Baden now part of Mannheim on 16 August 1832 the fourth child to parents Maximilian Wundt 1787 1846 a Lutheran minister and Marie Frederike nee Arnold 1797 1868 Two of Wundt s siblings died in childhood his brother Ludwig survived Wundt s paternal grandfather was Friedrich Peter Wundt 1742 1805 professor of geography and pastor in Wieblingen When Wundt was about six years of age his family moved to Heidelsheim then a small medieval town in Baden Wurttemberg Born in the German Confederation at a time that was considered very economically stable Wundt grew up during a period in which the reinvestment of wealth into educational medical and technological development was commonplace An economic striving for the advancement of knowledge catalyzed the development of a new psychological study method and facilitated his development into the prominent psychological figure he is today failed verification Education and Heidelberg career Wundt studied from 1851 to 1856 at the University of Tubingen at the University of Heidelberg and at the University of Berlin After graduating as a doctor of medicine from Heidelberg 1856 with doctoral advisor Karl Ewald Hasse Wundt studied briefly with Johannes Peter Muller before joining the Heidelberg University s staff becoming an assistant to the physicist and physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz in 1858 with responsibility for teaching the laboratory course in physiology There he wrote Contributions to the Theory of Sense Perception 1858 1862 In 1864 he became associate professor for anthropology and medical psychology and published a textbook about human physiology However his main interest according to his lectures and classes was not in the medical field he was more attracted by psychology and related subjects His lectures on psychology were published as Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology in 1863 1864 Wundt applied himself to writing a work that came to be one of the most important in the history of psychology Principles of Physiological Psychology in 1874 This was the first textbook that was written pertaining to the field of experimental psychology Marriage and family In 1867 near Heidelberg Wundt met Sophie Mau 1844 1912 She was the eldest daughter of the Kiel theology professor de and his wife Louise nee von Rumohr and a sister of the archaeologist August Mau They married on 14 August 1872 in Kiel The couple had three children Eleanor 1876 1957 who became an assistant to her father in many ways Louise called Lilli 1880 1884 and de 1879 1963 who became a philosophy professor Career in Zurich and Leipzig In 1875 Wundt was promoted to professor of Inductive Philosophy in Zurich and in 1875 Wundt was made professor of philosophy at the University of Leipzig where Ernst Heinrich Weber 1795 1878 and Gustav Theodor Fechner 1801 1887 had initiated research on sensory psychology and psychophysics and where two centuries earlier Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz had developed his philosophy and theoretical psychology which strongly influenced Wundt s intellectual path Wundt s admiration for Ernst Heinrich Weber was clear from his memoirs where he proclaimed that Weber should be regarded as the father of experimental psychology I would rather call Weber the father of experimental psychology It was Weber s great contribution to think of measuring psychic quantities and of showing the exact relationships between them to be the first to understand this and carry it out Laboratory of Experimental Psychology In 1879 at the University of Leipzig Wundt opened the first laboratory ever to be exclusively devoted to psychological studies and this event marked the official birth of psychology as an independent field of study The new lab was full of graduate students carrying out research on topics assigned by Wundt and it soon attracted young scholars from all over the world who were eager to learn about the new science that Wundt had developed The University of Leipzig assigned Wundt a lab in 1876 to store equipment he had brought from Zurich Located in the Konvikt building many of Wundt s demonstrations took place in this laboratory due to the inconvenience of transporting his equipment between the lab and his classroom Wundt arranged for the construction of suitable instruments and collected many pieces of equipment such as tachistoscopes chronoscopes pendulums electrical devices timers and sensory mapping devices and was known to assign an instrument to various graduate students with the task of developing uses for future research in experimentation Between 1885 and 1909 there were 15 assistants Wilhelm Wundt seated with colleagues in his psychological laboratory the first of its kind In 1879 Wundt began conducting experiments that were not part of his course work and he claimed that these independent experiments solidified his lab s legitimacy as a formal laboratory of psychology though the university did not officially recognize the building as part of the campus until 1883 The laboratory grew and encompassed a total of eleven rooms The Psychological Institute as it became known eventually moved to a new building that Wundt had designed specifically for psychological research Wundt s teaching in the Institute for Experimental Psychology The list of Wundt s lectures during the winter terms of 1875 1879 shows a wide ranging programme 6 days a week on average 2 hours daily e g in the winter term of 1875 Psychology of language Anthropology Logic and Epistemology and during the subsequent summer term Psychology Brain and Nerves as well as Physiology Cosmology Historical and General Philosophy were included in the following terms Wundt s doctoral students Wundt was responsible for an extraordinary number of doctoral dissertations between 1875 and 1919 185 students including 70 foreigners of whom 23 were from Russia Poland and other east European countries and 18 were from America Several of Wundt s students became eminent psychologists in their own right They include the Germans Oswald Kulpe a professor at the University of Wurzburg Ernst Meumann a professor in Leipzig and in Hamburg and a pioneer in pedagogical psychology Hugo Munsterberg a professor in Freiburg and at Harvard University a pioneer in applied psychology and cultural psychologist Willy Hellpach and the Armenian Gourgen Edilyan The Americans listed include James McKeen Cattell the first professor of psychology in the United States Granville Stanley Hall the father of the child psychology movement and adolescent developmental theorist head of Clark University Charles Hubbard Judd Director of the School of Education at the University of Chicago Walter Dill Scott who contributed to the development of industrial psychology and taught at Harvard University Edward Bradford Titchener Lightner Witmer founder of the first psychological clinic in his country Frank Angell Edward Wheeler Scripture James Mark Baldwin one of the founders of Princeton s Department of Psychology and who made important contributions to early psychology psychiatry and to the theory of evolution Wundt thus is present in the academic family tree of the majority of American psychologists first and second generation Worth mentioning are the Englishman Charles Spearman the Romanian Constantin Rădulescu Motru Personalist philosopher and head of the Philosophy department at the university of Bucharest Hugo Eckener the manager of the Luftschiffbau Zeppelin not to mention those students who became philosophers like Rudolf Eisler or the Serbian Ljubomir Nedic Students or visitors who were later to become well known included Vladimir Mikhailovich Bekhterev Bechterev Franz Boas Emile Durkheim Edmund Husserl Bronislaw Malinowski George Herbert Mead Edward Sapir Ferdinand Tonnies Benjamin Lee Whorf Much of Wundt s work was derided mid century in the United States because of a lack of adequate translations misrepresentations by certain students and behaviorism s polemic with Wundt s program Retirement and death Wundt retired in 1917 to devote himself to his scientific writing According to Wirth 1920 over the summer of 1920 Wundt felt his vitality waning and soon after his eighty eighth birthday he died a gentle death on the afternoon of Tuesday August 3 p 1 Wundt is buried in Leipzig s South Cemetery with his wife Sophie and their daughters Lilli and Eleanor Wundt s gravestoneAwards and HonorsWundt was awarded honorary doctorates from the Universities of Leipzig and Gottingen and the Pour le Merite for Science and Arts He was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Wundt was an honorary member of 12 scientific organizations or societies He was a corresponding member of 13 academies in Germany and abroad For example he was elected an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1895 and of the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1909 Wundt s name was given to the Asteroid Vundtia 635 Overview of Wundt s workWundt was initially a physician and a well known neurophysiologist before turning to sensory physiology and psychophysics He was convinced that for example the process of spatial perception could not solely be explained on a physiological level but also involved psychological principles Wundt founded experimental psychology as a discipline and became a pioneer of cultural psychology He created a broad research programme in empirical psychology and developed a system of philosophy and ethics from the basic concepts of his psychology bringing together several disciplines in one person Wundt s epistemological position against John Locke and English empiricism sensualism was made clear in his book Beitrage zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception published in 1862 by his use of a quotation from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the title page Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu nisi intellectu ipse Leibniz Nouveaux essais 1765 Livre II Des Idees Chapitre 1 6 Nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses except the intellect itself Principles that are not present in sensory impressions can be recognised in human perception and consciousness logical inferences categories of thought the principle of causality the principle of purpose teleology the principle of emergence and other epistemological principles Wundt s most important books are Lehrbuch der Physiologie des Menschen Textbook of Human Physiology 1864 1865 4th ed 1878 Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie Principles of Physiological Psychology 1874 6th ed 1908 1911 3 Vols System der Philosophie System of Philosophy 1889 4th ed 1919 2 Vols Logik Eine Untersuchung der Prinzipien der Erkenntnis und der Methoden wissenschaftlicher Forschung Logic An investigation into the principles of knowledge and the methods of scientific research 1880 1883 4th ed 1919 1921 3 Vols Ethik Ethics 1886 3rd ed 1903 2 Vols Volkerpsychologie Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache Mythos und Sitte Cultural Psychology An investigation into developmental laws of language myth and conduct 1900 1920 10 Vols Grundriss der Psychologie Outline of Psychology 1896 14th ed 1920 These 22 volumes cover an immense variety of topics On examination of the complete works however a close relationship between Wundt s theoretical psychology epistemology and methodology can be seen English translations are only available for the best known works Principles of physiological Psychology only the single volume 1st ed of 1874 and Ethics also only 1st ed of 1886 Wundt s work remains largely inaccessible without advanced knowledge of German Its reception therefore is still greatly hampered by misunderstandings stereotypes and superficial judgements Central themes in Wundt s workMemory Wilhelm Wundt conducted experiments on memory which would be considered today as iconic memory short term memory and enactment and generation effects Process theory Psychology is interested in the current process i e the mental changes and functional relationships between perception cognition emotion and volition motivation Mental psychological phenomena are changing processes of consciousness They can only be determined as an actuality an immediate reality of an event in the psychological experience The relationships of consciousness i e the actively organising processes are no longer explained metaphysically by means of an immortal soul or an abstract transcendental spiritual principle The delineation of categories Wundt considered that reference to the subject Subjektbezug value assessment Wertbestimmung the existence of purpose Zwecksetzung and volitional acts Willenstatigkeit to be specific and fundamental categories for psychology He frequently used the formulation the human as a motivated and thinking subject in order to characterise features held in common with the humanities and the categorical difference to the natural sciences Psychophysical parallelism Influenced by Leibniz Wundt introduced the term psychophysical parallelism as follows wherever there are regular relationships between mental and physical phenomena the two are neither identical nor convertible into one another because they are per se incomparable but they are associated with one another in the way that certain mental processes regularly correspond to certain physical processes or figuratively expressed run parallel to one another Although the inner experience is based on the functions of the brain there are no physical causes for mental changes Leibniz wrote Souls act according to the laws of final causes through aspirations ends and means Bodies act according to the laws of efficient causes i e the laws of motion And these two realms that of efficient causes and that of final causes harmonize with one another Monadology Paragraph 79 Wundt follows Leibniz and differentiates between a physical causality natural causality of neurophysiology and a mental psychic causality of the consciousness process Both causalities however are not opposites in a dualistic metaphysical sense but depend on the standpoint Causal explanations in psychology must be content to seek the effects of the antecedent causes without being able to derive exact predictions Using the example of volitional acts Wundt describes possible inversion in considering cause and effect ends and means and explains how causal and teleological explanations can complement one another to establish a co ordinated consideration Wundt s position differed from contemporary authors who also favoured parallelism Instead of being content with the postulate of parallelism he developed his principles of mental causality in contrast to the natural causality of neurophysiology and a corresponding methodology There are two fundamentally different approaches of the postulated psychophysical unit not just two points of view in the sense of Gustav Theodor Fechner s identity hypothesis Psychological and physiological statements exist in two categorically different reference systems the important categories are to be emphasised in order to prevent category mistakes as discussed by Nicolai Hartmann In this regard Wundt created the first genuine epistemology and methodology of empirical psychology the term philosophy of science did not yet exist Apperception Apperception is Wundt s central theoretical concept Leibniz described apperception as the process in which the elementary sensory impressions pass into self consciousness whereby individual aspirations striving volitional acts play an essential role Wundt developed psychological concepts used experimental psychological methods and put forward neuropsychological modelling in the frontal cortex of the brain system in line with today s thinking Apperception exhibits a range of theoretical assumptions on the integrative process of consciousness The selective control of attention is an elementary example of such active cognitive emotional and motivational integration Development theory of the mind The fundamental task is to work out a comprehensive development theory of the mind from animal psychology to the highest cultural achievements in language religion and ethics Unlike other thinkers of his time Wundt had no difficulty connecting the development concepts of the humanities in the spirit of Friedrich Hegel and Johann Gottfried Herder with the biological theory of evolution as expounded by Charles Darwin Critical realism Wundt determined that psychology is an empirical science co ordinating natural science and humanities and that the considerations of both complement one another in the sense that only together can they create for us a potential empirical knowledge He claimed that his views were free of metaphysics and were based on certain epistemological presuppositions including the differentiation of subject and object in the perception and the principle of causality With his term critical realism Wundt distinguishes himself from other philosophical positions Definition of psychology Wundt set himself the task of redefining the broad field of psychology between philosophy and physiology between the humanities and the natural sciences In place of the metaphysical definition as a science of the soul came the definition based on scientific theory of empirical psychology as a psychology of consciousness with its own categories and epistemological principles Psychology examines the entire experience in its immediately subjective reality The task of psychology is to precisely analyse the processes of consciousness to assess the complex connections psychische Verbindungen and to find the laws governing such relationships Psychology is not a science of the individual soul Life is a uniform mental and physical process that can be considered in a variety of ways in order to recognise general principles particularly the psychological historical and biological principles of development Wundt demanded an understanding of the emotional and the volitional functions in addition to cognitive features as equally important aspects of the unitary whole psychophysical process Psychology cannot be reduced to physiology The tools of physiology remain fundamentally insufficient for the task of psychology Such a project is meaningless because the interrelations between mental processes would be incomprehensible even if the interrelations between brain processes were as clearly understood as the mechanism of a pocket watch Psychology is concerned with conscious processes Wundt rejected making subconscious mental processes a topic of scientific psychology for epistemological and methodological reasons In his day there were before Sigmund Freud influential authors such as the philosopher Eduard von Hartmann 1901 who postulated a metaphysics of the unconscious Wundt had two fundamental objections He rejected all primarily metaphysically founded psychology and he saw no reliable methodological approach He also soon revised his initial assumptions about unconscious judgements When Wundt rejects the assumption of the unconscious he is also showing his scepticism regarding Fechner s theory of the unconscious and Wundt is perhaps even more greatly influenced by the flood of writing at the time on hypnotism and spiritualism Wundt 1879 1892 While Freud frequently quoted from Wundt s work Wundt remained sceptical about all hypotheses that operated with the concept of the unconscious For Wundt it would be just as much a misunderstanding to define psychology as a behavioural science in the sense of the later concept of strict behaviourism Numerous behavioural and psychological variables had already been observed or measured at the Leipzig laboratory Wundt stressed that physiological effects for example the physiological changes accompanying feelings were only tools of psychology as were the physical measurements of stimulus intensity in psychophysics Further developing these methodological approaches one sidedly would ultimately however lead to a behavioural physiology i e a scientific reductionism and not to a general psychology and cultural psychology Psychology is an empirical humanities science Wundt was convinced of the triple status of psychology as a science of the direct experience it contrasts with the natural sciences that refer to the indirect content of experience and abstract from the subject as a science of generally valid forms of direct human experience it is the foundation of the humanities among all the empirical sciences it was the one whose results most benefit the examination of the general problems of epistemology and ethics the two fundamental areas of philosophy Wundt s concepts were developed during almost 60 years of research and teaching that led him from neurophysiology to psychology and philosophy The interrelationships between physiology philosophy logic epistemology and ethics are therefore essential for an understanding of Wundt s psychology The core of Wundt s areas of interest and guiding ideas can already be seen in his Vorlesungen uber die Menschen und Tierseele Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology of 1863 individual psychology now known as general psychology i e areas such as perception attention apperception volition will feelings and emotions cultural psychology Wundt s Volkerpsychologie as development theory of the human mind animal psychology and neuropsychology The initial conceptual outlines of the 30 year old Wundt 1862 1863 led to a long research program to the founding of the first Institute and to the treatment of psychology as a discipline as well as to a range of fundamental textbooks and numerous other publications PhysiologyWundt illusion During the Heidelberg years from 1853 to 1873 Wundt published numerous essays on physiology particularly on experimental neurophysiology a textbook on human physiology 1865 4th ed 1878 and a manual of medical physics 1867 He wrote about 70 reviews of current publications in the fields of neurophysiology and neurology physiology anatomy and histology A second area of work was sensory physiology including spatial perception visual perception and optical illusions An optical illusion described by him is called the Wundt illusion a variant of the Hering Illusion It shows how straight lines appear curved when seen against a set of radiating lines PsychologyStarting point As a result of his medical training and his work as an assistant to Hermann von Helmholtz Wundt knew the benchmarks of experimental research as well as the speculative nature of psychology in the mid 19th century Wundt s aspiration for scientific research and the necessary methodological critique were clear when he wrote of the language of ordinary people who merely invoked their personal experiences of life criticized naive introspection or quoted the influence of uncritical amateur folk psychology on psychological interpretation His Beitrage zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung 1862 shows Wundt s transition from a physiologist to an experimental psychologist Why does not psychology follow the example of the natural sciences It is an understanding that from every side of the history of the natural sciences informs us that the progress of every science is closely connected with the progress made regarding experimental methods With this statement however he will in no way treat psychology as a pure natural science though psychologists should learn from the progress of methods in the natural sciences There are two sciences that must come to the aid of general psychology in this regard the development history of the mind and comparative psychology General psychology The Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie Main Features of Physiological Psychology on general psychology is Wundt s best known textbook He wanted to connect two sciences with one another Physiology provides information on all phenomena of life that can be perceived using our external senses In psychology humans examine themselves as it were from within and look for the connections between these processes to explain which of them represent this inner observation With sufficient certainty the approach can indeed be seen as well founded that nothing takes place in our consciousness that does not have its physical basis in certain physiological processes Wundt believed that physiological psychology had the following task firstly to investigate those life processes that are centrally located between external and internal experience which make it necessary to use both observation methods simultaneously external and internal and secondly to illuminate and where possible determine a total view of human existence from the points of view gained from this investigation The attribute physiological is not saying that it physiological psychology wants to reduce the psychology to physiology which I consider impossible but that it works with physiological i e experimental tools and indeed more so than is usual in other psychology takes into account the relationship between mental and physical processes If one wants to treat the peculiarities of the method as the most important factor then our science as experimental psychology differs from the usual science of the soul purely based on self observation After long chapters on the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system the Grundzuge 1874 has five sections the mental elements mental structure interactions of the mental structure mental developments the principles and laws of mental causality Through his insistence that mental processes were analysed in their elements Wundt did not want to create a pure element psychology because the elements should simultaneously be related to one another He describes the sensory impression with the simple sensory feelings perceptions and volitional acts connected with them and he explains dependencies and feedbacks Apperception theory Wundt rejected the widespread association theory according to which mental connections learning are mainly formed through the frequency and intensity of particular processes His term apperception psychology means that he considered the creative conscious activity to be more important than elementary association Apperception is an emergent activity that is both arbitrary and selective as well as imaginative and comparative In this process feelings and ideas are images apperceptively connected with typical tones of feeling selected in a variety of ways analysed associated and combined as well as linked with motor and autonomic functions not simply processed but also creatively synthesised see below on the Principle of creative synthesis In the integrative process of conscious activity Wundt sees an elementary activity of the subject i e an act of volition to deliberately move content into the conscious Insofar that this emergent activity is typical of all mental processes it is possible to describe his point of view as voluntaristic Wundt describes apperceptive processes as psychologically highly differentiated and in many regards bases this on methods and results from his experimental research One example is the wide ranging series of experiments on the mental chronometry of complex reaction times In research on feelings certain effects are provoked while pulse and breathing are recorded using a kymograph The observed differences were intended to contribute towards supporting Wundt s theory of emotions with its three dimensions pleasant unpleasant tense relaxed excited depressed Cultural psychology Wilhelm Wundt s Volkerpsychologie Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache Mythus und Sitte Social Psychology An Investigation of the Laws of Evolution of Language Myth and Custom 1900 1920 10 Vols which also contains the evolution of Arts Law Society Culture and History is a milestone project a monument of cultural psychology of the early 20th century The dynamics of cultural development were investigated according to psychological and epistemological principles Psychological principles were derived from Wundt s psychology of apperception theory of higher integrative processes including association assimilation semantic change and motivation will as presented in his Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie 1908 1910 6th ed 3 Vols In contrast to individual psychology cultural psychology aims to illustrate general mental development laws governing higher intellectual processes the development of thought language artistic imagination myths religion customs the relationship of individuals to society the intellectual environment and the creation of intellectual works in a society Where deliberate experimentation ends is where history has experimented on the behalf of psychologists Those mental processes that underpin the general development of human societies and the creation of joint intellectual results that are of generally recognised value are to be examined Stimulated by the ideas of previous thinkers such as Johann Gottfried Herder Johann Friedrich Herbart Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Wilhelm von Humboldt with his ideas about comparative linguistics the psychologist Moritz Lazarus 1851 and the linguist Heymann Steinthal founded the Zeitschrift fur Volkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft Journal for Cultural Psychology and Linguistics in 1860 which gave this field its name Wundt 1888 critically analysed the in his view still disorganised intentions of Lazarus and Steinthal and limited the scope of the issues by proposing a psychologically constituted structure The cultural psychology of language myth and customs were to be based on the three main areas of general psychology imagining and thought feelings and will motivation The numerous mental interrelations and principles were to be researched under the perspective of cultural development Apperception theory applied equally for general psychology and cultural psychology Changes in meanings and motives were examined in many lines of development and there are detailed interpretations based on the emergence principle creative synthesis the principle of unintended side effects heterogony of ends and the principle of contrast see section on Methodology and Strategies The ten volumes consist of Language Vols 1 and 2 Art Vol 3 Myths and Religion Vols 4 6 Society Vols 7 and 8 Law Vol 9 as well as Culture and History Vol 10 The methodology of cultural psychology was mainly described later in Logik 1921 Wundt worked on psychologically linked and structured an immense amount of material The topics range from agriculture and trade crafts and property through gods myths and Christianity marriage and family peoples and nations to self education and self awareness science the world and humanity Wundt recognized about 20 fundamental dynamic motives in cultural development Motives frequently quoted in cultural development are division of labour ensoulment salvation happiness production and imitation child raising artistic drive welfare arts and magic adornment guilt punishment atonement self education play and revenge Other values and motives emerge in the areas of freedom and justice war and peace legal structures state structures and forms of government also regarding the development of a world view of culture religion state traffic and a worldwide political and social society In religious considerations many of the values and motives i e belief in soul immortality belief in gods and demons ritualistic acts witchcraft animism and totemism are combined with the motives of art imagination dance and ecstasy as well as with forms of family and power Wundt saw examples of human self education in walking upright physical facilities and an interaction in part forced upon people by external conditions and in part the result of voluntary culture He described the random appearance and later conscious control of fire as a similar interaction between two motives In the interaction of human activity and the conditions of nature he saw a creative principle of culture right from the start tools as cultural products of a second nature An interactive system of cause and effect a system of purposes and thus values and reflexively from standards of one s own activities is formed according to the principles of one s own thinking In the Elemente der Volkerpsychologie The Elements of Cultural Psychology 1912 Wundt sketched out four main levels of cultural development primitive man the totemistic age the age of heroes and gods and the development of humanity The delineations were unclear and the depiction was greatly simplified Only this book was translated into English Elements of folk psychology thus providing but a much abridged insight into Wundt s differentiated cultural psychology The Folk Psychology part of the title already demonstrates the low level of understanding In retrospect Volkerpsychologie was an unfortunate choice of title because it is often misinterpreted as ethnology Wundt also considered calling it Social Anthropology Social Psychology and Community Psychology The term Kulturpsychologie would have been more fitting though psychological development theory of the mind would have expressed Wundt s intentions even better The intellectual potential and heuristics of Wundt s Cultural Psychology are by no means exhausted Neuropsychology Wundt contributed to the state of neuropsychology as it existed at the time in three ways through his criticism of the theory of localisation then widespread in neurology through his demand for research hypotheses founded on both neurological and psychological thinking and through his neuropsychological concept of an apperception centre in the frontal cortex Wundt considered attention and the control of attention an excellent example of the desirable combination of experimental psychological and neurophysiological research Wundt called for experimentation to localise the higher central nervous functions to be based on clear psychologically based research hypotheses because the questions could not be rendered precisely enough on the anatomical and physiological levels alone Wundt Grundzuge 1903 5th ed Vol 1 p 324 Wundt based his central theory of apperception on neuropsychological modelling from the 3rd edition of the Grundzuge onwards According to this the hypothetical apperception centre in the frontal cerebral cortex that he described could interconnect sensory motor autonomic cognitive emotional and motivational process components Wundt thus provided the guiding principle of a primarily psychologically oriented research programme on the highest integrative processes He is therefore a forerunner of current research on cognitive and emotional executive functions in the prefrontal cerebral cortex and on hypothetical multimodal convergence zones in the network of cortical and limbic functions This concept of an interdisciplinary neuroscience is now taken for granted but Wundt s contribution towards this development has almost been forgotten C S Sherrington repeatedly quotes Wundt s research on the physiology of the reflexes in his textbook but not Wundt s neuropsychological concepts Methodology and strategies Given its position between the natural sciences and the humanities psychology really does have a great wealth of methodological tools While on the one hand there are the experimental methods on the other hand objective works and products in cultural development Objektivationen des menschlichen Geistes also offer up abundant material for comparative psychological analysis Psychology is an empirical science and must endeavor to achieve a systematic procedure examination of results and criticism of its methodology Thus self observation must be trained and is only permissible under strict experimental control Wundt decisively rejects naive introspection Wundt provided a standard definition of psychological experiments His criticism of Immanuel Kant Wundt 1874 had a major influence Kant had argued against the assumption of the measurability of conscious processes and made a well founded if very short criticism of the methods of self observation regarding method inherent reactivity observer error distorting attitudes of the subject and the questionable influence of independently thinking people but Wundt expressed himself optimistic that methodological improvements could be of help here He later admitted that measurement and mathematics were only applicable for very elementary conscious processes Statistical methods were also of only limited value for example in psychophysics or in the evaluation of population statistics Experimental psychology in Leipzig mainly lent on four methodological types of assessment the impression methods with their various measurement techniques in psychophysics the reaction methods for chronometry in the psychology of apperception the reproduction methods in research on memory and the expression methods with observations and psychophysiological measurement in research on feelings Wundt considered the methodology of his linguistic psychological investigations Vols 1 and 2 of Volkerpsychologie to be the most fruitful path to adequate psychological research on the thought process The principles of his cultural psychological methodology were only worked out later These involved the analytical and comparative observation of objective existing materials i e historical writings language works art reports and observations of human behaviour in earlier cultures and more rarely direct ethnological source material Wundt differentiated between two objectives of comparative methodology individual comparison collected all the important features of the overall picture of an observation material while generic comparison formed a picture of variations to obtain a typology Rules of generic comparison and critical interpretation are essentially explained in his Logik We therefore generally describe the epitome of the methods as interpretation that is intended to provide us with an understanding of mental processes and intellectual creation Wundt clearly referred to the tradition of humanistic hermeneutics but argued that the interpretation process basically also followed psychological principles Interpretation only became the characteristic process of the humanities through criticism It is a process that is set against interpretation to dismantle the interaction produced through psychological analysis It examines external or internal contradictions it should evaluate the reality of intellectual products and is also a criticism of values and a criticism of opinions The typical misconceptions of the intellectualistic individualistic and unhistorical interpretation of intellectual processes all have their source in the habitually coarse psychology based on subjective assessment Principles of mental causality What is meant by these principles is the simple prerequisites of the linking of psychological facts that cannot be further extrapolated The system of principles has several repeatedly reworked versions with corresponding laws of development for cultural psychology Wundt 1874 1894 1897 1902 1903 1920 1921 Wundt mainly differentiated between four principles and explained them with examples that originate from the physiology of perception the psychology of meaning from apperception research emotion and motivation theory and from cultural psychology and ethics The Principle of creative synthesis or creative results the emergence principle Every perception can be broken down into elemental impressions But it is never just the sum of these impressions but from the linkage of them that a new one is created with individual features that were not contained in the impressions themselves We thus put together the mental picture of a spatial form from a multitude of impressions of light This principle proves itself in all mental causality linkages and accompanies mental development from its first to its consummate stage Wundt formulated this creative synthesis which today would also be described as the principle of emergence in system theory as an essential epistemological principle of empirical psychology long before the phrase the whole is more than the sum of its parts or supra summation was used in gestalt psychology The Principle of relational analysis context principle This principle says that every individual mental content receives its meaning through the relationships in which it stands to other mental content The Principle of mental contrasts or reinforcement of opposites or development in dichotomies Typical contrast effects are to be seen in sensory perceptions in the course of emotions and in volitional processes There is a general tendency to order the subjective world according to opposites Thus many individual historical economic and social processes exhibit highly contrasting developments The Principle of the heterogony of purpose ends The consequences of an action extend beyond the original intended purpose and give rise to new motives with new effects The intended purpose always induces side effects and knock on effects that themselves become purposes i e an ever growing organisation through self creation In addition to these four principles Wundt explained the term of intellectual community and other categories and principles that have an important relational and insightful function Wundt demands co ordinated analysis of causal and teleological aspects he called for a methodologically versatile psychology and did not demand that any decision be made between experimental statistical methods and interpretative methods qualitative methods Whenever appropriate he referred to findings from interpretation and experimental research within a multimethod approach Thus for example the chapters on the development of language or on enlargement of fantasy activity in cultural psychology also contain experimental statistical and psychophysiological findings He was very familiar with these methods and used them in extended research projects This was without precedent and has since then rarely been achieved by another individual researcher PhilosophyWundt s philosophical orientation In the introduction to his Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie in 1874 Wundt described Immanuel Kant and Johann Friedrich Herbart as the philosophers who had the most influence on the formation of his own views Those who follow up these references will find that Wundt critically analysed both these thinkers ideas He distanced himself from Herbart s science of the soul and in particular from his mechanism of mental representations and pseudo mathematical speculations While Wundt praised Kant s critical work and his rejection of a rational psychology deduced from metaphysics he argued against Kant s epistemology in his publication Was soll uns Kant nicht sein What Kant should we reject 1892 with regard to the forms of perception and presuppositions as well as Kant s category theory and his position in the dispute on causal and teleological explanations Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz had a far greater and more constructive influence on Wundt s psychology philosophy epistemology and ethics This can be gleaned from Wundt s Leibniz publication 1917 and from his central terms and principles but has since received almost no attention Wundt gave up his plans for a biography of Leibniz but praised Leibniz s thinking on the two hundredth anniversary of his death in 1916 He did however disagree with Leibniz s monadology as well as theories on the mathematisation of the world by removing the domain of the mind from this view Leibniz developed a new concept of the soul through his discussion on substance and actuality on dynamic spiritual change and on the correspondence between body and soul parallelism Wundt secularised such guiding principles and reformulated important philosophical positions of Leibniz away from belief in God as the creator and belief in an immortal soul Wundt gained important ideas and exploited them in an original way in his principles and methodology of empirical psychology the principle of actuality psychophysical parallelism combination of causal and teleological analysis apperception theory the psychology of striving i e volition and voluntary tendency principles of epistemology and the perspectivism of thought Wundt s differentiation between the natural causality of neurophysiology and the mental causality of psychology the intellect is a direct rendering from Leibniz s epistemology Wundt devised the term psychophysical parallelism and meant thereby two fundamentally different ways of considering the postulated psychophysical unit not just two views in the sense of Fechner s theory of identity Wundt derived the co ordinated consideration of natural causality and mental causality from Leibniz s differentiation between causality and teleology principle of sufficient reason The psychological and physiological statements exist in two categorically different reference systems the main categories are to be emphasised in order to prevent category mistakes With his epistemology of mental causality he differed from contemporary authors who also advocated the position of parallelism Wundt had developed the first genuine epistemology and methodology of empirical psychology Wundt shaped the term apperception introduced by Leibniz into an experimental psychologically based apperception psychology that included neuropsychological modelling When Leibniz differentiates between two fundamental functions perception and striving this approach can be recognised in Wundt s motivation theory The central theme of unity in the manifold unitas in multitudine also originates from Leibniz who has influenced the current understanding of perspectivism and viewpoint dependency Wundt characterised this style of thought in a way that also applied for him the principle of the equality of viewpoints that supplement one another plays a significant role in his thinking viewpoints that supplement one another while also being able to appear as opposites that only resolve themselves when considered more deeply Unlike the great majority of contemporary and current authors in psychology Wundt laid out the philosophical and methodological positions of his work clearly Wundt was against the founding empirical psychology on a metaphysical or structural principle of soul as in Christian belief in an immortal soul or in a philosophy that argues substance ontologically Wundt s position was decisively rejected by several Christianity oriented psychologists and philosophers as a psychology without soul although he did not use this formulation from Friedrich Lange 1866 who was his predecessor in Zurich from 1870 to 1872 Wundt s guiding principle was the development theory of the mind Wundt s ethics also led to polemical critiques due to his renunciation of an ultimate transcendental basis of ethics God the Absolute Wundt s evolutionism was also criticised for its claim that ethical norms had been culturally changed in the course of human intellectual development Wundt s autobiography and his inaugural lectures in Zurich and Leipzig as well as his commemorative speeches for Fechner and his Essay on Leibniz provide an insight into the history of Wundt s education and the contemporary flows and intellectual controversies in the second half of the 19th century Wundt primarily refers to Leibniz and Kant more indirectly to Johann Gottlieb Fichte Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling and Arthur Schopenhauer and to Johann Friedrich Herbart Gustav Theodor Fechner and Hermann Lotze regarding psychology In addition to John Locke George Berkeley David Hume and John Stuart Mill one finds Francis Bacon Charles Darwin and Charles Spencer as well as French thinkers such as Auguste Comte and Hippolyte Taine all of whom are more rarely quoted by Wundt Metaphysics Wundt distanced himself from the metaphysical term soul and from theories about its structure and properties as posited by Herbart Lotze and Fechner Wundt followed Kant and warned against a primarily metaphysically founded philosophically deduced psychology where one notices the author s metaphysical point of view in the treatment of every problem then an unconditional empirical science is no longer involved but a metaphysical theory intended to serve as an exemplification of experience He is however convinced that every single science contains general prerequisites of a philosophical nature All psychological investigation extrapolates from metaphysical presuppositions Epistemology was to help sciences find out about clarify or supplement their metaphysical aspects and as far as possible free themselves of them Psychology and the other sciences always rely on the help of philosophy here and particularly on logic and epistemology otherwise only an immanent philosophy i e metaphysical assumptions of an unsystematic nature would form in the individual sciences Wundt is decidedly against the segregation of philosophy He is concerned about psychologists bringing their own personal metaphysical convictions into psychology and that these presumptions would no longer be exposed to epistemological criticism Therefore nobody would suffer more from such a segregation than the psychologists themselves and through them psychology Nothing would promote the degeneration of psychology to a mere craftsmanship more than its segregation from philosophy System of philosophy Wundt claimed that philosophy as a general science has the task of uniting to become a consistent system through the general knowledge acquired via the individual sciences Human rationality strives for a uniform i e non contradictory explanatory principle for being and consciousness for an ultimate reasoning for ethics and for a philosophical world basis Metaphysics is the same attempt to gain a binding world view as a component of individual knowledge on the basis of the entire scientific awareness of an age or particularly prominent content Wundt was convinced that empirical psychology also contributed fundamental knowledge on the understanding of humans for anthropology and ethics beyond its narrow scientific field Starting from the active and creative synthetic apperception processes of consciousness Wundt considered that the unifying function was to be found in volitional processes and the conscious setting of objectives and subsequent activities There is simply nothing more to a man that he can entirely call his own except for his will One can detect a voluntaristic tendency in Wundt s theory of motivation in contrast to the currently widespread cognitivism intellectualism Wundt extrapolated this empirically founded volitional psychology to a metaphysical voluntarism He demands however that the empirical psychological and derived metaphysical voluntarism are kept apart from one another and firmly maintained that his empirical psychology was created independently of the various teachings of metaphysics Wundt interpreted intellectual cultural progress and biological evolution as a general process of development whereby however he did not want to follow the abstract ideas of entelechy vitalism animism and by no means Schopenhauer s volitional metaphysics He believed that the source of dynamic development was to be found in the most elementary expressions of life in reflexive and instinctive behaviour and constructed a continuum of attentive and apperceptive processes volitional or selective acts up to social activities and ethical decisions At the end of this rational idea he recognised a practical ideal the idea of humanity as the highest yardstick of our actions and that the overall course of human history can be understood with regard to the ideal of humanity Wilhelm Wundt portrait bust by Max Klinger 1908Ethics Parallel to Wundt s work on cultural psychology he wrote his much read Ethik 1886 3rd ed in 2 Vols 1903 whose introduction stressed how important development considerations are in order to grasp religion customs and morality Wundt considered the questions of ethics to be closely linked with the empirical psychology of motivated acts Psychology has been such an important introduction for me and such an indispensable aid for the investigation of ethics that I do not understand how one could do without it Wundt sees two paths the anthropological examination of the facts of a moral life in the sense of cultural psychology and the scientific reflection on the concepts of morals The derived principles are to be examined in a variety of areas the family society the state education etc In his discussion on free will as an attempt to mediate between determinism and indeterminism he categorically distinguishes between two perspectives there is indeed a natural causality of brain processes though conscious processes are not determined by an intelligible but by the empirical character of humans volitional acts are subject to the principles of mental causality When a man only follows inner causality he acts freely in an ethical sense which is partly determined by his original disposition and partly by the development of his character On the one hand Ethics is a normative discipline while on the other hand these rules change as can be seen from the empirical examination of culture related morality Wundt s ethics can put simply be interpreted as an attempt to mediate between Kant s apriorism and empiricism Moral rules are the legislative results of a universal intellectual development but are neither rigidly defined nor do they simply follow changing life conditions Individualism and utilitarianism are strictly rejected In his view only the universal intellectual life can be considered to be an end in itself Wundt also spoke on the idea of humanity in ethics on human rights and human duties in his speech as Rector of Leipzig University in 1889 on the centenary of the French Revolution Logic epistemology and the scientific theory of psychology Wundt divided up his three volume Logik into General logic and epistemology Logic of the exact sciences and Logic of the humanities While logic the doctrine of categories and other principles were discussed by Wundt in a traditional manner they were also considered from the point of view of development theory of the human intellect i e in accordance with the psychology of thought The subsequent equitable description of the special principles of the natural sciences and the humanities enabled Wundt to create a new epistemology The ideas that remain current include epistemology and the methodology of psychology the tasks and directions of psychology the methods of interpretation and comparison as well as psychological experimentation Complete works and legacyPublications libraries and letters Wilhelm Wundt commemorative plaque University of Leipzig The list of works at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science includes a total of 589 German and foreign language editions for the period from 1853 to 1950 MPI fur Wissenschaftsgeschichte Werkverzeichnis Wilhelm Wundt The American psychologist Edwin Boring counted 494 publications by Wundt excluding pure reprints but with revised editions that are on average 110 pages long and amount to a total of 53 735 pages Thus Wundt published an average of seven works per year over a period of 68 years and wrote or revised an average of 2 2 pages per day There is as yet no annotated edition of the essential writings nor does a complete edition of Wundt s major works exist apart from more or less suitable scans or digitalisations Apart from his library and his correspondence Wundt s extraordinarily extensive written inheritance also includes many extracts manuscripts lecture notes and other materials Wundt s written inheritance in Leipzig consists of 5 576 documents mainly letters and was digitalised by the Leipzig University Library The catalogue is available at the Kalliope online portal One third of Wundt s own library was left to his children Eleonore and Max Wundt most of the works were sold during the times of need after the First World War to Tohoku University in Sendai Japan The university s stock consists of 6 762 volumes in western languages including bound periodicals as well as 9 098 special print runs and brochures from the original Wundt Library The list in the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science only mentions 575 of these entries Tubingen University Archive s stock includes copies of 613 letters Wundt s will lists from Wundt s original library and other materials and Wundtiana The German Historical Museum in Berlin has a 1918 shellac disk on which Wundt repeats the closing words of his inaugural lecture given in Zurich on 31 October 1874 and re read in 1918 for documentation purposes On the task of philosophy in the present Biographies The last Wundt biography which tried to represent both Wundt s psychology and his philosophy was by Eisler 1902 One can also get an idea of Wundt s thoughts from his autobiography Erlebtes und Erkanntes 1920 Later biographies by Nef 1923 and Petersen 1925 up to Arnold in 1980 restrict themselves primarily to the psychology or the philosophy Eleonore Wundt s 1928 knowledgeable but short biography of her father exceeds many others efforts Political attitude At the start of the First World War Wundt like Edmund Husserl and Max Planck signed the patriotic call to arms as did about 4 000 professors and lecturers in Germany and during the following years he wrote several political speeches and essays that were also characterized by the feeling of a superiority of German science and culture During Wundt s early Heidelberg time he espoused liberal views He co founded the Association of German Workers Associations He was a member of the liberal Progressive Party of Baden From 1866 to 1869 he represented Heidelberg in the Baden States Assembly In old age Wundt appeared to become more conservative see Wundt 1920 Wundt s correspondence then also in response to World War I the subsequent social unrest and the severe revolutionary events of the post war period adopted an attitude that was patriotic and lent towards nationalism Wilhelm Wundt s son philosopher Max Wundt had an even more clearly intense somewhat nationalist stance Although not a member of the Nazi party NSDAP Max Wundt wrote about national traditions and race in philosophical thinking Wundt Societies Four Wilhelm Wundt Societies or Associations have been founded 1925 to 1968 Wilhelm Wundt Stiftung und Verband Freunde des Psychologischen Instituts der Universitat Leipzig founded by former assistants and friends of Wundts 1979 Wilhelm Wundt Gesellschaft based in Heidelberg a scientific association with a limited number of members set up with the aim of promoting fundamental psychological research and further developing it through its efforts 1992 to 1996 Wundt Stiftung e V und Forderverein Wundt Stiftung e V based in Bonn Leipzig 2016 Forderverein Wilhelm Wundt Haus in Grossbothen The purpose of the association is the maintenance and restoration of the Wundt home in keeping with its listed building status as well as its appropriate use The association was founded on the initiative of Juttemann 2014 The Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Psychologie German Society for Psychology grants a Wilhelm Wundt Medal Reception of Wundt s workThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2025 Learn how and when to remove this message Reception by his contemporaries The psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin described the pioneering spirit at the new Leipzig Institute in this fashion We felt that we were trailblazers entering virgin territory like creators of a science with undreamt of prospects Wundt spent several afternoons every week in his adjacent modest Professorial office came to see us advised us and often got involved in the experiments he was also available to us at any time The philosopher Rudolf Eisler considered Wundt s approach as follows A major advantage of Wundt s philosophy is that it neither consciously nor unconsciously takes metaphysics back to its beginnings but strictly distinguishes between empirical scientific and epistemological metaphysical approaches and considers each point of view in isolation in its relative legitimacy before finally producing a uniform world view Wundt always differentiates between the physical physiological and the purely psychological and then again from the philosophical point of view As a result apparent contradictions are created for those who do not observe more precisely and who constantly forget that the differences in results are only due to the approach and not the laws of reality Traugott Oesterreich 1923 1951 wrote an unusually detailed description of Wundt s work in his Foundations of the History of Philosophy This knowledgeable representation examines Wundt s main topics views and scientific activities and exceeds the generally much briefer Wundt reception within the field of psychology in which many of the important prerequisites and references are ignored right from the start The internal consistency of Wundt s work from 1862 to 1920 between the main works and within the reworked editions has repeatedly been discussed and been subject to differing assessments in parts One could not say that the scientific conception of psychology underwent a fundamental revision of principal ideas and central postulates though there was gradual development and a change in emphasis One could consider Wundt s gradual concurrence with Kant s position that conscious processes are not measurable on the basis of self observation and cannot be mathematically formulated to be a major divergence Wundt however never claimed that psychology could be advanced through experiment and measurement alone but had already stressed in 1862 that the development history of the mind and comparative psychology should provide some assistance Wundt attempted to redefine and restructure the fields of psychology and philosophy Experimental psychology in the narrower sense and child psychology form individual psychology while cultural and animal psychology are both parts of a general and comparative psychology None of his Leipzig assistants and hardly any textbook authors in the subsequent two generations have adopted Wundt s broad theoretical horizon his demanding scientific theory or the multi method approach Oswald Kulpe had already ruled cultural and animal psychology out While the Principles of physiological Psychology met with worldwide resonance Wundt s cultural psychology ethno psychology appeared to have had a less widespread impact But there are indications that George Herbert Mead and Franz Boas among others were influenced by it In his Totem and Taboo Sigmund Freud frequently quoted Wundt s cultural psychology In its time Wundt s Ethik received more reviews than almost any of his other main works Most of the objections were ranged against his renouncing any ultimate transcendental ethical basis God the Absolute as well as against his ideas regarding evolution i e that ethical standards changed culturally in the course of human intellectual development As Wundt did not describe any concrete ethical conflicts on the basis of examples and did not describe any social ethics in particular his teachings with the general idea of humanism appear rather too abstract The XXII International Congress for Psychology in Leipzig in 1980 i e on the hundredth jubilee of the initial founding of the institute in 1879 stimulated a number of publications about Wundt also in the US Very little productive research work has been carried out since then While Wundt was occasionally mentioned in the centenary review of the founding of the German Society for Experimental Psychology 1904 2004 it was without the principal ideas of his psychology and philosophy of science Research on reception of his work Leipzig was a world famous centre for the new psychology after 1874 There are various interpretations regarding why Wundt s influence after the turn of the century i e during his lifetime rapidly waned and from his position as founding father Wundt became almost an outsider A survey was conducted on the basis of more than 200 contemporary and later sources reviews and critiques of his publications since 1858 references to Wundt s work in textbooks on psychology and the history of psychology from 1883 to 2010 biographies congress reports praise on his decadal birthdays obituaries and other texts A range of scientific controversies were presented in detail Reasons for the distancing of Wundt and why some of his concepts have fallen into oblivion can be seen in his scientific work in his philosophical orientation in his didactics or in the person of Wundt himself Possibly the most important reason for Wundt s relatively low influence might lie in his highly ambitious epistemologically founded conception of psychology in his theory of science and in the level of difficulty involved in his wide ranging methodology Most psychologies in the subsequent generation appear to have a considerably simpler less demanding philosophical point of view instead of coordinated causal and teleological considerations embedded in multiple reference systems that consequently also demanded a multi method approach Thus instead of perspectivism and a change in perspective an apparently straightforward approach is preferred i e research oriented upon either the natural sciences or the humanities Wundt s assistants and colleagues many of whom were also personally close did not take on the role of students and certainly not the role of interpreters Oswald Kulpe Ernst Meumann Hugo Munsterberg or Felix Krueger did not want to or could not adequately reference Wundt s comprehensive scientific conception of psychology in their books for example they almost entirely ignored Wundt s categories and epistemological principles his strategies in comparison and interpretation the discussions regarding Kant s in depth criticism of methodology and Wundt s neuropsychology Nobody in this circle developed a creative continuation of Wundt s concepts Krueger s inner distance to a scientific concept and the entire work of his predecessor cannot be overlooked Through his definition of soul as an actual process Wundt gave up the metaphysical idea of a substantial carrier his psychology without a soul was heavily criticized by several contemporary and later psychologists and philosophers Wundt exposed himself to criticism with his theoretical and experimental psychologically differentiated apperception psychology as opposed to elemental association psychology and with his comprehensive research programme on a development theory of the human intellect now seen as an interdisciplinary or trans disciplinary project Misunderstandings of basic terms and principles Wundt s terminology also created difficulties because he had from today s point of view given some of his most important ideas unfortunate names so that there were constant misunderstandings Examples include physiological psychology specifically not a scientific physiological psychology because by writing the adjective with a small letter Wundt wanted to avoid this misunderstanding that still exists today for him it was the use of physiological aids in experimental general psychology that mattered Self observation not naive introspection but with training and experimental control of conditions Experiment this was meant with reference to Francis Bacon general i e far beyond the scientific rules of the empirical sciences so not necessarily a statistically evaluated laboratory experiment For Wundt psychological experimentation primarily served as a check of trained self observation Element not in the sense of the smallest structure but as a smallest unit of the intended level under consideration so that for example even the central nervous system could be an element Volkerpsychologie cultural psychology not ethnology Apperception not just an increase in attention but a central and multimodal synthesis Voluntaristic tendency voluntarism not an absolute metaphysical postulate but a primary empirically psychologically based accentuation of motivated action against the intellectualism and cognitivism of other psychologists A representation of Wundt s psychology as natural science element psychology or dualistic conceptions is evidence of enduring misunderstandings It is therefore necessary to remember Wundt s expressly stated desire for uniformity and lack of contradiction for the mutual supplementation of psychological perspectives Wundt s more demanding sometimes more complicated and relativizing then again very precise style can also be difficult even for today s German readers a high level of linguistic competence is required There are only English translations for very few of Wundt s work In particular the Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie expanded into three volumes and the ten volumes of Volkerpsychologie all the books on philosophy and important essays on the theory of science remain untranslated Such shortcomings may explain many of the fundamental deficits and lasting misunderstandings in the Anglo American reception of Wundt s work Massive misconceptions about Wundt s work have been demonstrated by William James Granville Stanley Hall Edward Boring and Edward Titchener as well as among many later authors Titchener a two year resident of Wundt s lab and one of Wundt s most vocal advocates in the United States is responsible for several English translations and mistranslations of Wundt s works that supported his own views and approach which he termed structuralism and claimed was wholly consistent with Wundt s position As Wundt s three volume Logik und Wissenschaftslehre i e his theory of science also remains untranslated the close interrelationships between Wundt s empirical psychology and his epistemology and methodology philosophy and ethics are also regularly missing even if later collections describe individual facets of them Blumenthal s assessment that American textbook accounts of Wundt now present highly inaccurate and mythological caricatures of the man and his work still appears to be true of most publications about Wundt A highly contradictory picture emerges from any systematic research on his reception On the one hand the pioneer of experimental psychology and founder of modern psychology as a discipline is praised on the other hand his work is insufficiently tapped and appears to have had little influence Misunderstandings and stereotypical evaluations continue into the present even in some representations of the history of psychology and in textbooks Wundt s entire work is investigated in a more focused manner in more recent assessments regarding the reception of Wundt and his theory of science and his philosophy is included Araujo 2016 Danziger 1983 1990 2001 Fahrenberg 2011 2015 2016 Juttemann 2006 Kim 2016 van Rappard 1980 Scientific controversies and criticisms Like other important psychologists and philosophers Wundt was subject to ideological criticism for example by authors of a more Christianity based psychology by authors with materialistic and positivistic scientific opinions or from the point of view of Marxist Leninist philosophy and social theory as in Leipzig German Democratic Republic up to 1990 Wundt was involved in a number of scientific controversies or was responsible for triggering them the Wundt Zeller controversy about the measurability of awareness processes the Wundt Meumann controversy about the necessary scope of the scientific principles of applied psychology the Wundt Buhler controversy about the methodology of the psychology of thought the controversy about the psychology of elemental passive mechanic association and integrative self active apperception the controversy about empirio criticism positivism and critical realism and the controversy about psychologism There are many forms of criticism of Wundt s psychology of his apperception psychology of his motivation theory of his version of psychophysical parallelism with its concept of mental causality his refutation of psychoanalytic speculation about the unconscious or of his critical realism A recurring criticism is that Wundt largely ignored the areas of psychology that he found less interesting such as differential psychology child psychology and educational psychology In his cultural psychology there is no empirical social psychology because there were still no methods for investigating it at the time Among his postgraduate students assistants and other colleagues however were several important pioneers differential psychology mental measurement and intelligence testing James McKeen Cattell Charles Spearman social psychology of group pocesses and the psychology of work Walther Moede applied psychology Ernst Meumann Hugo Munsterberg psychopathology psychopharmacology and clinical diagnosis Emil Kraepelin Wundt further influenced many American psychologists to create psychology graduate programs Wundt s excellenceWilhelm Wundt Southwest University Chongqing ChinaThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2025 Learn how and when to remove this message Wundt developed the first comprehensive and uniform theory of the science of psychology The special epistemological and methodological status of psychology is postulated in this wide ranging conceptualization characterized by his neurophysiological psychological and philosophical work The human as a thinking and motivated subject is not to be captured in the terms of the natural sciences Psychology requires special categories and autonomous epistemological principles It is on the one hand an empirical humanity but should not on the other hand ignore its physiological basis and philosophical assumptions Thus a varied multi method approach is necessary self observation experimentation generic comparison and interpretation Wundt demanded the ability and readiness to distinguish between perspectives and reference systems and to understand the necessary supplementation of these reference systems in changes of perspective He defined the field of psychology very widely and as interdisciplinary and also explained just how indispensable is the epistemological philosophical criticism of psychological theories and their philosophical prerequisites Psychology should remain connected with philosophy in order to promote this critique of knowledge of the metaphysical presuppositions so widespread among psychologists The conceptual relationships within the complete works created over decades and continuously reworked have hardly been systematically investigated The most important theoretical basis is the empirical psychological theory of apperception based on Leibniz s philosophical position that Wundt on the one hand based on experimental psychology and his neuropsychological modelling and on the other hand extrapolated into a development theory for culture The fundamental reconstruction of Wundt s main ideas is a task that cannot be achieved by any one person today due to the complexity of the complete works He tried to connect the fundamental controversies of the research directions epistemologically and methodologically by means of a co ordinated concept in a confident handling of the categorically basically different ways of considering the interrelations Here during the founding phase of university psychology he already argued for a highly demanding meta science meta scientific reflection and this potential to stimulate interdisciplinarity und perspectivism complementary approaches has by no means been exhausted Selected worksBooks and articles Lehre von der Muskelbewegung The Patterns of Muscular Movement Vieweg Braunschweig 1858 Die Geschwindigkeit des Gedankens The Velocity of Thought Die Gartenlaube 1862 Vol 17 p 263 Beitrage zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception Winter Leipzig 1862 Vorlesungen uber die Menschen und Tierseele Lectures about Human and Animal Psychology Voss Leipzig Part 1 and 2 1863 1864 4th revised ed 1906 Lehrbuch der Physiologie des Menschen Textbook of Human Physiology Enke Erlangen 1864 1865 4th ed 1878 Die physikalischen Axiome und ihre Beziehung zum Causalprincip Physical Axioms and their Bearing upon Causality Principles Enke Erlangen 1866 Handbuch der medicinischen Physik Handbook of Medical Physics Enke Erlangen 1867 Digitalisat und Volltext im Deutschen Textarchiv Untersuchungen zur Mechanik der Nerven und Nervenzentren Investigations upon the Mechanisms of Nerves and Nerve Centres Enke Erlangen 1871 1876 Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie Principles of physiological Psychology Engelmann Leipzig 1874 5th ed 1902 1903 6th ed 1908 1911 3 Vols Uber die Aufgabe der Philosophie in der Gegenwart Rede gehalten zum Antritt des offentlichen Lehramts der Philosophie an der Hochschule in Zurich am 31 Oktober 1874 On the Task of Philosophy in the present Philosophische Monatshefte 1874 Vol 11 pp 65 68 Uber den Einfluss der Philosophie auf die Erfahrungswissenschaften Akademische Antrittsrede gehalten in Leipzig am 20 November 1875 On the Impact of Philosophy on the empirical Sciences Engelmann Leipzig 1876 Der Spiritismus eine sogenannte wissenschaftliche Frage Spiritism a so called scientific Issue Engelmann Leipzig 1879 Logik Eine Untersuchung der Principien der Erkenntnis und der Methoden wissenschaftlicher Forschung Logic An investigation into the principles of knowledge and the methods of scientific research Enke Stuttgart 1880 1883 4th ed 1919 1921 3 Vols Ueber die Messung psychischer Vorgange On the measurement of mental events Philosophische Studien 1883 Vol 1 pp 251 260 pp 463 471 Ueber psychologische Methoden On psychological Methods Philosophische Studien 1883 Vol 1 pp 1 38 Essays Engelmann Leipzig 1885 Ethik Eine Untersuchung der Tatsachen und Gesetze des sittlichen Lebens Ethics Enke Stuttgart 1886 3rd ed 1903 2 Vols Uber Ziele und Wege der Volkerpsychologie On Aims and Methods of Cultural Psychology Philosophische Studien 1888 Vol 4 pp 1 27 System der Philosophie System of Philosophy Engelmann Leipzig 1889 4th ed 1919 2 Vols Grundriss der Psychologie Outline of Psychology Engelmann Leipzig 1896 14th ed 1920 Uber den Zusammenhang der Philosophie mit der Zeitgeschichte Eine Centenarbetrachtung On the Relation between Philosophy and contemporary History Rede des antretenden Rectors Dr phil jur et med Wilhelm Wundt F Hauser Hrsg Die Leipziger Rektoratsreden 1871 1933 Vol I Die Jahre 1871 1905 pp 479 498 Berlin de Gruyter 1889 2009 Hypnotismus und Suggestion Hypnotism and Suggestion Engelmann Leipzig 1892 Ueber psychische Causalitat und das Princip des psycho physischen Parallelismus On mental Causality and the Principle of psycho physical Parallelism Philosophische Studien 1894 Vol 10 pp 1 124 Ueber die Definition der Psychologie On the Definition of Psychology Philosophische Studien 1896 Vol 12 pp 9 66 Uber naiven und kritischen Realismus I III On naive and critical Realism Philosophische Studien 1896 1898 Vol 12 pp 307 408 Vol 13 pp 1 105 pp 323 433 Volkerpsychologie Cultural Psychology 10 Volumes Vol 1 2 Die Sprache Language Vol 3 Die Kunst Art Vol 4 5 6 Mythos und Religion Myth and Religion Vol 7 8 Die Gesellschaft Society Vol 9 Das Recht Right Vol 10 Kultur und Geschichte Culture and History Engelmann Leipzig 1900 to 1920 some vol revised or reprinted 3rd ed 1919 ff 4th ed 1926 Einleitung in die Philosophie Introduction to Philosophy Engelmann Leipzig 1909 8th ed 1920 Gustav Theodor Fechner Rede zur Feier seines hundertjahrigen Geburtstags Engelmann Leipzig 1901 Uber empirische und metaphysische Psychologie On empirical and metaphysical Psychology Archiv fur die gesamte Psychologie 1904 Vol 2 pp 333 361 Uber Ausfrageexperimente und uber die Methoden zur Psychologie des Denkens Psychologische Studien 1907 Vol 3 pp 301 360 Kritische Nachlese zur Ausfragemethode Archiv fur die gesamte Psychologie 1908 Vol 11 pp 445 459 Uber reine und angewandte Psychologie On pure and applied Psychology Psychologische Studien 1909 Vol 5 pp 1 47 Das Institut fur experimentelle Psychologie In Festschrift zur Feier des 500 jahrigen Bestehens der Universitat Leipzig ed by Rektor und Senat der Universitat Leipzig 1909 118 133 S Hirzel Leipzig 1909 Psychologismus und Logizismus Psychologism and Logizism Kleine Schriften Vol 1 pp 511 634 Engelmann Leipzig 1910 Kleine Schriften Shorter Writings 3 Volumes Engelmann Leipzig 1910 1911 Einfuhrung in die Psychologie Durr Leipzig 1911 Probleme der Volkerpsychologie Problems in Cultural Psychology Wiegandt Leipzig 1911 Elemente der Volkerpsychologie Grundlinien einer psychologischen Entwicklungsgeschichte der Menschheit Elements of Cultural Psychology Kroner Leipzig 1912 Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein Psychology s Struggle for Existence Kroner Leipzig 1913 Reden und Aufsatze Addresses and Extracts Kroner Leipzig 1913 Sinnliche und ubersinnliche Welt The Sensory and Supersensory World Kroner Leipzig 1914 Uber den wahrhaften Krieg About the Real War Kroner Leipzig 1914 Die Nationen und ihre Philosophie Nations and Their Philosophies Kroner Leipzig 1915 Volkerpsychologie und Entwicklungspsychologie Cultural Psychology and Developmental Psychology Psychologische Studien 1916 10 189 238 Leibniz Zu seinem zweihundertjahrigen Todestag 14 November 1916 Kroner Verlag Leipzig 1917 Die Weltkatastrophe und die deutsche Philosophie Keysersche Buchhandlung Erfurt 1920 Erlebtes und Erkanntes Experience and Realization Kroner Stuttgart 1920 Kleine Schriften Vol 3 Kroner Stuttgart 1921 Wundt s works in English References given by Alan Kim Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt 1974The Language of Gestures Ed Blumenthal A L Berlin De Gruyter 1973An Introduction to Psychology New York Arno Press 1969 Outlines of Psychology 1897 Tr Judd C H St Clair Shores MI Scholarly Press 1916Elements of Folk Psychology Tr Schaub E L London Allen idem 1901The Principles of Morality and the Departments of the Moral Life Trans Washburn M F London Swan Sonnenschein New York Macmillan 1896 2nd ed Lectures on human and animal psychology Creighton J G Titchener E B trans London Allen Translation of Wundt 1863 1893 3rd ed Principles of physiological psychology Titchener E B trans London Allen Translation of Wundt 1874 New York 1904 See alsoAnti psychologismNotesThe main part of the inscription is WILHELM WUNDT geboren 16 August 1832 in Neckarau bei Mannheim gestorben 31 August 1920 in Grossbothen bei Leipzig Gott ist Geist und die ihn anbeten mussen ihn im Geist und in der Wahrheit anbeten SOPHIE WUNDT GEB oren MAU geboren 23 Januar 1844 in Kiel gestorben 15 April 1914 in Leipzig Gott ist die Liebe und wer in Liebe bleibt der bleibt in Gott und Gott in ihm A translation is WILHELM WUNDT born 16 August 1832 in Neckarau in Mannheim died 31 August 1920 in Grossbothen in Leipzig God is Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth SOPHIE Wundt NEE MAU born 23 January 18 1844 in Kiel died 15 April 1914 in Leipzig God is love and who abides in love abides in God and God in him ReferencesNeil Carlson Donald C Heth Psychology the Science of Behaviour Pearson Education Inc 2010 ISBN 0 205 54786 9 p 18 Kim Alan 2022 Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt in Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri eds The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2022 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 5 March 2023 Butler Bowdon Tom 2007 50 Psychology Classics Who We Are How We Think What We Do Insight and Inspiration from 50 Key Books Nicholas Brealey Publishing p 2 ISBN 978 1 85788 473 9 Wundt Das Institut fur experimentelle Psychologie Leipzig 1909 118 133 Fahrenberg Jochen 2019 Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 PDF PsychArchives Retrieved 28 November 2022 J H Korn R Davis S F Davis Historians and chairpersons judgements of eminence among psychologists American Psychologist 1991 Volume 46 pp 789 792 Lamberti 1995 pp 15 22 Craig Gordon Alexander 22 October 1999 Germany 1866 1945 Oxford University Press Retrieved 22 October 2019 Wundt Wilhelm 1856 Untersuchungen uber das Verhalten der Nerven in entzundeten und degenerirten Organen Research on the behaviour of nerves in burned and degenerating organs MD thesis University of Frieburg a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lamberti 1995 pp 81 86 pp 114 134 Lamberti 1995 pp 87 113 Robinson David Autumn 2017 David K Robinson on an important meeting of minds at Leipzig University Founding Fathers 23 976 977 Archived from the original on 12 August 2013 via google scholar Wontorra Fruhe apparative Psychologie 2009 Anneros Meischner Metge Wilhelm Wundt und seine Schuler In Horst Peter Brauns Ed Zentenarbetrachtungen Historische Entwicklungen in der neueren Psychologie bis zum Ende des 20 Jahrhunderts Peter Lang Frankfurt a M 2003 pp 156 166 Wundt Das Institut fur experimentelle Psychologie 1909 118 133 Bringmann Ungerer 1990 The Foundation of the Institute for Experimental Psychology at Leipzig University Psychological Research 42 13 Homepage des Instituts fur Psychologie an der Universitat Leipzig psychologie biphaps uni leipzig de Retrieved 22 October 2019 J Ben David R Collins Social factors in the origins of a new science The case of psychology American Sociological Review 1966 Volume 31 451 465 Sprung Wilhelm Wundt Bedenkenswertes und Bedenkliches aus seinem Lebenswerk 1979 pp 73 82 Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt Pionier der Psychologie und Aussenseiter Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte 2011 Bringmann W G Balance W D G Evans R B 1975 Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 A brief biographical sketch Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 11 3 287 297 doi 10 1002 1520 6696 197507 11 3 lt 287 AID JHBS2300110309 gt 3 0 CO 2 L PMID 11609842 Wirth W 1920 Unserem grossen Lehrer Wilhelm Wundt in unausloschlicher Dankbarkeit zum Gedachtnis In eternal gratitude to the memory of our great teacher Wilhelm Wundt Archiv fur die gesamte Psychologie in German 40 1 16 Nomination Archive Nobel Prize April 2020 Retrieved 23 May 2022 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 14 March 2024 Wilhelm Wundt www nasonline org Retrieved 14 March 2024 Kurt Danziger 1980 On the threshold of the New Psychology Situating Wundt and James In W G Bringmann E D Tweney Eds Wundt Studies A Centennial Collection pp 362 379 Hogrefe Toronto Tweeny D Yachanin S A 1980 Titchener s Wundt S 380 395 In W G Bringmann E D Tweney Eds Wundt Studies A Centennial Collection pp 380 395 Hogrefe Toronto Fahrenberg Jochen 2011 Wilhelm Wundt Pionier der Psychologie und Aussenseiter Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte Wilhelm Wundt pioneer in psychology and outsider Basic concepts and their reception in German Leibniz Institut fur Psychologie ZPID doi 10 23668 psycharchives 10417 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Carpenter Shana K August 2005 Some Neglected Contributions of Wilhelm Wundt to the Psychology of Memory Psychological Reports 97 1 63 73 doi 10 2466 pr0 97 1 63 73 ISSN 0033 2941 PMID 16279306 S2CID 575658 Wundt Grundriss der Psychologie 1920 S 393 Wundt Ueber psychische Causalitat und das Princip des psycho physischen Parallelismus 1894 Wundt Logik 1921 Band 3 S 15 19 Fahrenberg Zur Kategorienlehre der Psychologie 2013 S 86 131 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 1903 Band 3 S 769 G W Leibniz Die Prinzipien der Philosophie und Monadologie Les principles de la philosophie ou la monadologie 1714 1720 In Thomas Leinkauf Hrsg Leibniz Eugen Diederichs Verlag Munchen 1996 S 406 424 Wundt 1894 1897 1902 1903 Volume 3 Nicolai Hartmann Der Aufbau der realen Welt Grundriss der allgemeinen Kategorienlehre De Gruyter Berlin 1940 2nd ed 1949 pp 87 ff Wundt Uber naiven und kritischen Realismus 1896 1898 Wundt Uber die Definition der Psychologie 1896 pp 21 Wundt Uber empirische und metaphysische Psychologie 1904 pp 336 Wundt Grundriss der Psychologie 1920 14th ed p 14 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 1903 Volume 3 S 777 Saulo de F Araujo Why did Wundt abandon his early theory of the unconscious 2012 Volume 15 pp 33 49 Saulo de F Araujo Wundt and the Philosophical Foundations of Psychology A Reappraisal 2016 Christfried Togel Freud und Wundt Von der Hypnose bis zur Volkerpsychologie In B Nitzschke Ed Freud und die akademische Psychologie Urban amp Schwarzenberg Munchen 1989 pp 97 105 Fahrenberg Theoretische Psychologie 2015 pp 310 314 Wundt Grundriss der Psychologie 1920 14th ed pp 18 f Wundt Volkerpsychologie 1900 Volume 1 p 15 Wundt Logik 1921 Volume 3 p 297 Wundt Beitrage zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung 1862 p XI Wundt Beitrage 1862 p XVI Wundt Grundzuge 1874 p 1 Wundt Grundzuge 1874 p 858 Wundt Grundzuge 1874 pp 2 3 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 Volume 2 pp 263 369 Wundt 1863 p IX Wundt Volkerpsychologie 1911 3rd ed Vol 1 p 1 Wundt Volkerpsychologie Vol 10 p 189 Wundt Volkerpsychologie Vol 10 p 195 Tr Schaub E L Allen London 1916 Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie Volkerpsychologie 2016b Ziche Neuroscience in its context 1999 Fahrenberg Wundts Neuropsychologie 2015b Ch S Sherrington The integrative Action of the Nervous System Henry Frowde London 1911 Wundt Logik 1921 4th ed Volume 3 p 51 Wundt 1907 1908 1921 Immanuel Kant Anthropologie in pragmatischer Hinsicht Schriften zur Anthropologie Geschichtsphilosophie Politik und Padagogik Immanuel Kant Werkausgabe Band 6 hrsg von Wilhelm Weischedel Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1798 1983 pp 395 690 Wundt Grundzuge 1874 pp 5 8 Fahrenberg Theoretische Psychologie 2015a pp 115 126 pp 228 234 Wundt Grundzuge 1908 1910 Wontorra 2009 Wundt 1921 pp 62 ff 238 f 1920a p 372 Wundt Logik 1921 4th ed Volume 3 p 297 Wundt Vorlesungen uber Menschen und Tierseele 1863 Volume 1 p 435 f Wundt Erlebtes und Erkanntes 1920 p 183 Wundt Grundriss der Psychologie 1920 p 401 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 1903 Volume 3 S 785 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 1903 Volume 3 p 789 Wundt Grundzuge 1902 1903 Volume 3 Meischner Metge Die Methode der Forschung 2006 pp 131 143 Fahrenberg 2016b Wundt Grundzuge 1874 Chapter 19 Fahrenberg 2016a Fahrenberg 2016a Fahrenberg Zur Kategorienlehre 2013 S 288 296 Wundt Leibniz 1917 S 117 reception analysis see Fahrenberg 2011 2015a Wundt Erlebtes und Erkanntes 1920 Wundt 1874 Wundt 1875 Wundt 1901 Wundt 1917 Araoujo 2016 Fahrenberg 2016a Wundt Grundriss der Psychologie 1896 p 22 Wundt System der Philosophie 1919 Volume 1 pp IX f Wundt System der Philosophie 1897 p 33 Wundt Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein 1913 p 24 Wundt Die Psychologie im Kampf ums Dasein 1913 p 37 Wundt System der Philosophie 1919 Volume 1 p 17 Wundt System der Philosophie 1897 p 377 Wundt System der Philosophie 1919 Volume 1 p IX f Wundt Ethik 1886 p 577 Grundzuge 1902 1903 Vol 3 Wundt Ethik 1886 Vorwort p III Wundt Ethik 1886 p 410 Boring A history of experimental psychology 2nd ed 1950 p 345 Fahrenberg 2016 Meyer 2015 Ungerer 2016 M Takasuma The Wundt Collection in Japan In R W Rieber D K Robinson Hrsg Wilhelm Wundt in history The making of a scientific psychology Kluwer Academic New York 2001 pp 251 258 Wade N J Sakurai K Gyoba J Jiro 2007 Guest editorial essay Whither Wundt Perception 36 2 163 166 doi 10 1068 p3602ed PMID 17402661 Inventory UAT 228 with inventory lists UAT 228 16 to 228 24 Signature T90 447 length of recording is 2 minutes Mark Michalski Der Gang des deutschen Denkens Konigshausen amp Neumann Wurzburg 2010 Emil Kraepelin Nachruf Wilhelm Wundt Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie 1920 Volume 61 351 362 Rudolf Eisler W Wundts Philosophie und Psychologie 1902 p 13 Araujo 2016 Fahrenberg 2011 2015 2016 Graumann 1980 Juttemann 2006 Wundt Beitrage 1862 p XIV Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt 2011 S 14 16 Paul Ziche Wissenschaftslandschaften um 1900 Philosophie die Wissenschaften und der nichtreduktive Szientismus 2008 Wundt 1902 p 6 Kulpe 1893 p 7ff Eckardt 1997 Graumann 2006 Wolfgang G Bringmann Ryan D Tweney Eds Wundt studies 1980 Wolfgang G Bringmann Eckart Scheerer Eds Wundt centennial issue 1980 Volume 42 pp 1 189 Robert W Rieber David K Robinson Eds Wilhelm Wundt in history The making of a scientific psychology 2001 Thomas Rammsayer Stefan Troche Eds Reflexionen der Psychologie 100 Jahre Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Psychologie Bericht uber den 44 Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie in Gottingen 2004 Hogrefe Gottingen 2005 Felix Krueger Eroffnung des XIII Kongresses Die Lage der Seelenwissenschaft in der deutschen Gegenwart In Otto Klemm Hrsg Bericht uber den XIII Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie in Leipzig vom 16 19 Oktober 1933 Fischer Jena 1934 pp 6 36 Wundt Uber Ausfrageexperimente 1907 p 301ff Bringmann et al 1980 Arthur L Blumenthal Wilhelm Wundt Problems of interpretation In W G Bringmann E D Tweney Eds Wundt Studies A Centennial Collection Hogrefe Toronto 1980 pp 435 445 SourcesBiographies Rieber R ed 2013 Wilhelm Wundt and the making of a scientific psychology Springer Science amp Business Media Alfred Arnold Wilhelm Wundt Sein philosophisches System Akademie Verlag Berlin 1980 Edwin G Boring A history of experimental psychology 2nd ed The Century Company New York 1950 Arthur L Blumenthal Wundt Wilhelm Dictionary of Scientific Biography 25 Charles New York 1970 1980 Bringmann Wolfgang G Balance W D Evans R B 1975 Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 a brief biographical sketch Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 11 3 287 297 doi 10 1002 1520 6696 197507 11 3 lt 287 AID JHBS2300110309 gt 3 0 CO 2 L PMID 11609842 Rudolf Eisler W Wundts Philosophie und Psychologie In ihren Grundlehren dargestellt Barth Leipzig 1902 Granville Stanley Hall Founders of modern psychology Appleton New York 1912 Wilhelm Wundt Der Begrunder der modernen Psychologie Vorwort von Max Brahn Meiner Leipzig 1914 Alan Kim Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2016 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt Edmund Konig Wilhelm Wundt als Psycholog und als Philosoph Fromman Stuttgart 1901 Georg Lamberti Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt 1832 1920 Leben Werk und Personlichkeit in Bildern und Texten Deutscher Psychologen Verlag Berlin 1995 ISBN 3 925559 83 3 Wolfram Meischner Erhard Eschler Wilhelm Wundt Pahl Rugenstein Koln 1979 ISBN 3 7609 0457 2 Willi Nef Die Philosophie Wilhelm Wundts Meiner Leipzig 1923 Traugott K Oesterreich 1923 1951 Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie IV Die Deutsche Philosophie des Neunzehnten Jahrhunderts und der Gegenwart 15 Aufl 1951 unverand Nachdr der vollig neubearb 12 Aufl Mittler amp Sohn Tubingen 1923 pp 343 360 483 485 Peter Petersen Wilhelm Wundt und seine Zeit Frommanns Verlag Stuttgart 1925 Lothar Sprung Wilhelm Wundt Bedenkenswertes und Bedenkliches aus seinem Lebenswerk In Georg Eckardt Hrsg Zur Geschichte der Psychologie Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften Berlin 1979 pp 73 82 Eleonore Wundt Wilhelm Wundt Deutsches Biographisches Jahrbuch hrsg vom Verband der Deutschen Akademien Deutsche Verlagsanstalt Berlin 1928 Uberleitungsband II 1917 1920 pp 626 636 Contemporary sources Eduard von Hartmann Die moderne Psychologie Eine kritische Geschichte der deutschen Psychologie in der zweiten Halfte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts Haacke Leipzig 1901 Arthur Hoffmann Erfurt Hrsg Wilhelm Wundt Eine Wurdigung 1 Aufl 1922 2 verm Aufl 1924 Stenger Erfurt 1924 Edmund Konig W Wundt Seine Philosophie und Psychologie F Frommann Stuttgart 1901 Festschrift Wilhelm Wundt zum siebzigsten Geburtstage Uberreicht von seinen Schulern 1 Theil Philosophische Studien 19 Band Wilhelm Engelmann Leipzig 1902 Festschrift Wilhelm Wundt zum siebzigsten Geburtstage Uberreicht von seinen Schulern 2 Theil Philosophische Studien 20 Band Wilhelm Engelmann Leipzig 1902 Woolf Cohen Knowledge and Reality in the Philosophy of Wilhelm Max Wundt Unpublished Ph D thesis at Cornell University Ithaca NY 1923 Otto Klemm Zur Geschichte des Leipziger Psychologischen Instituts In A Hoffmann Erfurt Hrsg Wilhelm Wundt Eine Wurdigung 2 Auflage Stenger Erfurt 1924 pp 93 101 Felix Krueger Eroffnung des XIII Kongresses Die Lage der Seelenwissenschaft in der deutschen Gegenwart In Otto Klemm Hrsg Bericht uber den XIII Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie in Leipzig vom 16 19 Oktober 1933 Fischer Jena 1934 pp 6 36 Leonore Wundt Wilhelm Wundts Werke Ein Verzeichnis seiner samtlichen Schriften Beck Munchen 1927 Recent sources Araujo Saulo de Freitas 2012 Why did Wundt abandon his early theory of the unconscious Towards a new interpretation of Wundt s psychological project History of Psychology 15 1 33 49 doi 10 1037 a0024478 PMID 22530377 Saulo de F Araujo Wundt and the Philosophical Foundations of Psychology A Reappraisal Springer New York 2016 ISBN 978 3 319 26634 3 Arthur L Blumenthal Leipzig Wilhelm Wundt and psychology s gilded age In G A Kimble M Wertheimer M Eds Portraits of pioneers in psychology Vol III American Psychological Association Washington D C 1998 Bringmann Wolfgang G Scheerer Eckart 1980 Preface Psychological Research 42 1 2 i 4 doi 10 1007 BF00308687 Wolfgang G Bringmann N J Bringmann W D Balance Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt 1832 1874 The formative years In W G Bringmann R D Tweney Eds Wundt studies A centennial Collection Hogrefe Toronto 1980 pp 12 32 Wolfgang G Bringmann Ryan D Tweney Eds Wundt studies Hogrefe Toronto 1980 ISBN 0 88937 001 X Wolfgang G Bringmann N J Bringmann G A Ungerer The establishment of Wundt s laboratory An archival and documentary study In Wolfgang Bringmann Ryan D Tweney Eds Wundt Studies Hogrefe Toronto 1980 ISBN 0 88937 001 X pp 123 157 Danziger Kurt 1979 The positivist repudiation of Wundt Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 15 3 205 230 doi 10 1002 1520 6696 197907 15 3 lt 205 AID JHBS2300150303 gt 3 0 CO 2 P PMID 11608280 Kurt Danziger On the threshold of the New Psychology Situating Wundt and James In W G Bringmann E D Tweney Eds Wundt Studies A Centennial Collection Hogrefe Toronto 1980 pp 362 379 Danziger Kurt 1990 Constructing the Subject doi 10 1017 CBO9780511524059 ISBN 978 0 521 36358 7 Danziger Kurt 2001 Wundt and the Temptations of Psychology Wilhelm Wundt in History Path in Psychology pp 69 94 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 0665 2 2 ISBN 978 1 4613 5184 9 Georg Eckardt Ed Volkerpsychologie Versuch einer Neuentdeckung Psychologie Verlags Union Weinheim 1997 Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt Pionier der Psychologie und Aussenseiter Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte Wilhelm Wundt pioneer in psychology and outsider Basic concepts and their reception e book 2011 PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt Pionier der Psychologie und Aussenseiter Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte Fahrenberg Jochen 2012 Wilhelm Wundts Wissenschaftstheorie der Psychologie Psychologische Rundschau 63 4 228 238 doi 10 1026 0033 3042 a000141 Jochen Fahrenberg Zur Kategorienlehre der Psychologie Komplementaritatsprinzip Perspektiven und Perspektiven Wechsel On categories in psychology Complementarity principle perspectives and perspective taking Pabst Science Publishers Lengerich 2013 ISBN 978 3 89967 891 8 PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt Pionier der Psychologie und Aussenseiter Leitgedanken der Wissenschaftskonzeption und deren Rezeptionsgeschichte Jochen Fahrenberg Theoretische Psychologie Eine Systematik der Kontroversen Theoretical psychology A system of controversies Lengerich Pabst Science Publishers Lengerich 2015a ISBN 978 3 95853 077 5 PsyDok ZPID Theoretische Psychologie Eine Systematik der Kontroversen Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundts Neuropsychologie Wilhelm Wundt s neuropsychology D Emmans amp A Laihinen Eds Comparative Neuropsychology and Brain Imaging Commemorative publication in honour of Prof Dr Ulrike Halsband LIT Verlag Vienna 2015b ISBN 978 3 643 90653 3 pp 348 373 Fahrenberg Jochen 2016 Leibniz Einfluss auf Wundts Psychologie und Philosophie Psychologische Rundschau 67 4 276 doi 10 1026 0033 3042 a000332 Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie Volkerpsychologie Eine Psychologische Entwicklungstheorie des Geistes Wilhelm Wundt s cultural psychology A psychological theory on the development of mind 2016b PsyDok Wilhelm Wundts Kulturpsychologie Volkerpsychologie Eine Psychologische Entwicklungstheorie des Geistes Jochen Fahrenberg Wundt Nachlass 2016c PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundts Nachlass Eine Ubersicht Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Gesamtwerk Einfuhrung Zitate Rezeption Kommentare Rekonstruktionsversuche Pabst Science Publishers Lengerich 2018 ISBN 978 3 95853 435 3 PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Gesamtwerk Einfuhrung Zitate Kommentare Rezeption Rekonstruktionsversuche Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Introduction Quotations Reception Commentaries Attempts at Reconstruction Pabst Science Publishers Lengerich 2020 ISBN 978 3 95853 574 9 PsyDok ZPID Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Introduction Quotations Reception Commentaries Attempts at Reconstruction Jochen Fahrenberg Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Eine Centenarbetrachtung Ein Ruckblick auf das Werk von Wilhelm Wundt und dessen Rezeption und Aktualitat https doi org 10 23668 psycharchives 5580 PDF 1 09 MB 2022 Graumann Carl F 1980 Experiment Statistik Geschichte Wundts erstes Heidelberger Programm einer Psychologie Psychologische Rundschau 31 73 83 Carl F Graumann Die Verbindung und Wechselwirkung der Individuen im Gemeinschaftsleben In Gerd Juttemann Ed Wilhelm Wundts anderes Erbe Ein Missverstandnis lost sich auf Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 2006 pp 52 68 Hildebrandt H 1989 Psychophysischer Parallelismus In J Ritte K Grunder Hrsg Historisches Worterbuch der Philosophie Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1989 Volume 7 pp 101 107 Willem Van Hoorn T Verhave Wilhelm Wundts s conception of his multiple foundations of scientific psychology In W Meischner A Metge Hrsg Wilhelm Wundt progressives Erbe Wissenschaftsentwicklung und Gegenwart Protokoll des internationalen Symposiums Karl Marx Universitat Leipzig 1979 Pahl Rugenstein Koln 1980 pp 107 117 Jurgen Jahnke Wilhelm Wundts akademische Psychologie 1886 87 Die Vorlesungsnachschriften von Albert Thumb Freiburg In Jurgen Jahnke Jochen Fahrenberg Reiner Stegie Eberhard Bauer Hrsg Psychologiegeschichte Beziehungen zu Philosophie und Grenzgebieten Profil Munchen 1998 ISBN 3 89019 461 3 pp 151 168 Gerd Juttemann Ed Wilhelm Wundts anderes Erbe Ein Missverstandnis lost sich auf Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 2006 ISBN 3 525 49087 9 Alan Kim Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2016 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt Friedrich A Lange Geschichte des Materialismus und Kritik seiner Bedeutung in der Gegenwart 8 erw Aufl 1908 hrsg und bearbeitet von Hermann Cohen Baedeker Iserlohn 1866 Wolfram Meischner Anneros Metge Wilhelm Wundt progressives Erbe Wissenschaftsentwicklung und Gegenwart Protokoll des internationalen Symposiums Karl Marx Universitat Leipzig 1979 Pahl Rugenstein Koln 1980 Anneros Meischner Metge Wilhelm Wundt und seine Schuler In Horst Peter Brauns Ed Zentenarbetrachtungen Historische Entwicklungen in der neueren Psychologie bis zum Ende des 20 Jahrhunderts Peter Lang Frankfurt a M 2003 pp 156 166 Anneros Meischner Metge Die Methode der Forschung In G Juttemann Hrsg Wilhelm Wundts anderes Erbe Ein Missverstandnis lost sich auf Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 2006 pp 131 143 Till Meyer Das DFG Projekt Erschliessung und Digitalisierung des Nachlasses von Wilhelm Wundt an der Universitatsbibliothek Leipzig In Leipziger Jahrbuch fur Buchgeschichte 2015 Volume 23 pp 347 357 Rappard H V 1980 A monistic interpretation of Wundt s psychology Psychological Research 42 1 2 123 134 doi 10 1007 BF00308697 S2CID 143838892 Robert W Rieber David K Robinson Eds Wilhelm Wundt in history The making of a scientific psychology Kluwer Academic New York 1980 2nd ed 2001 Eckhard Scheerer Psychologie In J Ritter K Grunder Hrsg Historisches Worterbuch der Philosophie Schwabe amp Co Basel 1989 Volume 7 pp 1599 1654 Ungerer Gustav A 1980 Wilhelm Wundt als Psychologe und Politiker Psychologische Rundschau 31 99 110 Gustav A Ungerer Forschungen zur Biographie Wilhelm Wundts und zur Regionalgeschichte Gesammelte Aufsatze 1978 1997 Ein Logbuch Verlag Regionalkultur Ubstadt Weiher 2016 ISBN 978 3 89735 851 5 Wong Wan chi 2009 Retracing the footsteps of Wilhelm Wundt Explorations in the disciplinary frontiers of psychology and in Volkerpsychologie History of Psychology 12 4 229 265 doi 10 1037 a0017711 PMID 20509352 Maximilian Wontorra Fruhe apparative Psychologie Der Andere Verlag Leipzig 2009 Maximilian Wontorra Ingrid Kastner Erich Schroger Hrsg Wilhelm Wundts Briefwechsel Institut fur Psychologie Leipzig 2011 Maximilian Wontorra Anneros Meischner Metge Erich Schroger Hrsg Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 und die Anfange der experimentellen Psychologie Institut fur Psychologie Leipzig 2004 ISBN 3 00 013477 8 Ziche P 1999 Neuroscience in its context Neuroscience and psychology in the work of Wilhelm Wundt Physis Riv Int Stor Sci 36 2 407 29 PMID 11640242 Paul Ziche Wissenschaftslandschaften um 1900 Philosophie die Wissenschaften und der nichtreduktive Szientismus Chronos Zurich 2008 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Wilhelm Wundt Wikisource has original works by or about Wilhelm WundtWikiquote has quotations related to Wilhelm Wundt Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wilhelm Wundt Works by and about Wilhelm Wundt in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek German Digital Library Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt Biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Wilhelm Wundt Bibliography 589 entries Nachlass von Wilhelm Wundt im Kalliope Verbund Universitat Leipzig Wilhelm Wundt Universitat Leipzig Wilhelm Wundt und die Anfange der experimentellen Psychologie Universitat Heidelberg Wilhelm Wundt und die Institutionalisierung der Psychologie Wundt s Lectures at the University of Zurich 1874 1875 Wundt s Lectures at the University of Leipzig Alan Kim Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt Works online Grundzuge der physiologischen Psychologie Grundriss der Psychologie Wilhelm Wundt Erlebtes und Erkanntes Works by Wilhelm Wundt at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Wilhelm Wundt at the Internet Archive Wilhelm Wundt and the making of a scientific psychologyEarlier translations online Caution Earlier translations of Wundt s publications are of a highly questionable reliability Principles of Physiological Psychology Outlines of Psychology Ethics An Investigation of the Facts and Laws of the Moral Life Volume 1 Tr Edward B Titchener et al Second Edition 1902 University of Michigan Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology Trs Edward B Titchener and James E Creighton Second Edition 1896 Harvard Fourth Edition 1907 Stanford UCLA University of Illinois Outlines of Psychology Tr Charles Hubbard Judd Second Edition 1902 Stanford Principles of Physiological Psychology Volume 1 Tr Edward B Titchener First Edition 1904 Harvard Lane University of Michigan HTML Second Edition 1910 UCLA