9 research outputs found

    Psychology as a natural science in the eighteenth century

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    Psychology considered as a natural science began as Aristotelian "physics" or "natural philosophy" of the soul. C. Wolff placed psychology under metaphysics, coordinate with cosmology. Scottish thinkers placed it within moral philosophy, but distinguished its "physical" laws from properly moral laws (for guiding conduct). Several Germans sought to establish an autonomous empirical psychology as a branch of natural science. British and French visual theorists developed mathematically precise theories of size and distance perception; they created instruments to test these theories and to measure visual phenomena such as the duration of visual impressions. These investigators typically were dualists who included mental phenomena within nature

    An Essay on the History of Civil Society

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    História das ideias, história das ciências humanas e sociologia do conhecimento

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    The formation of college English: A survey of the archives of eighteenth‐century rhetorical theory and practice

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