Principles of Mental Physiology: With Their Applications to the Training and Discipline of the Mind, and the Study of Its Morbid Conditions (Cambridge Library Collection - History of Medicine)

by William Benjamin Carpenter

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William Carpenter (1813-85) was trained as a doctor; he was apprenticed to an eye surgeon, and later attended University College London and the University of Edinburgh, obtaining his M. D. in 1839. Rather than practising medicine, he became a teacher, specialising in neurology, and it was his work as a zoologist on marine invertebrates that brought him wide scientific recognition. His Principles of Mental Physiology, published in 1874, developed the ideas he had first expounded in the 1850s, and expounds the arguments for and against the two models of psychology then current - automatism, which assumed that the mind operates under the control of the physiology of the body for all human activity, and free will, 'an independent power, controlling and directing that activity.' Drawing on animal as well as human examples, his arguments, especially on the acquisition of mental traits in the individual, are much influenced by Darwin.
  • ISBN10 1147016550
  • ISBN13 9781147016550
  • Publish Date 9 March 2010 (first published 20 July 2009)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Nabu Press
  • Format Paperback (US Trade)
  • Pages 710
  • Language English