Christine Ladd-Franklin
Psychologist and logician
Christine Ladd-Franklin's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Psychology Philosophy
Christine Ladd-Franklin's Degrees
- PhD Mathematics Johns Hopkins University
- PhD Psychology Johns Hopkins University
Why Is Christine Ladd-Franklin Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Christine Ladd-Franklin was an American psychologist, logician, and mathematician. Early life and education Christine Ladd, sometimes known by the nickname "Kitty", was born on December 1, 1847, in Windsor, Connecticut, to Eliphalet, a merchant, and Augusta Ladd. During her early childhood, she lived with her parents and younger brother Henry in New York City. In 1853 the family moved back to Windsor, Connecticut, where her sister Jane Augusta Ladd McCordia was born the following year. Family correspondence shows that Augusta and one of her sisters were both staunch supporters of women's rights. Before Ladd turned five, her mother had taken her to a lecture given by Elizabeth Oakes Smith, a well-known proponent of women's rights. Additionally, her father was a graduate professor who was supportive of his eldest daughter's education.
Christine Ladd-Franklin's Published Works
Published Works
- On Some Characteristics of Symbolic Logic (1889) (19)
- A NEW THEORY OF LIGHT SENSATION. (1893) (9)
- Intuition and Reason. (7)
- Discussion and reports: Color-introspection on the part of the Eskimo. (7)
- Mill's natural kinds (6)
- IV.—ON THEORIES OF LIGHT-SENSATION (1893) (5)
- THE PASCAL HEXAGRAM. (1883) (5)
- RICHET ON MENTAL SUGGESTION. (1885) (5)
- A Note on the Phenomena of Mescal Intoxication. (4)
- The normal defect of vision in the fovea. (1895) (4)
- THE REDUCTION TO ABSURDITY OF THE ORDINARY TREATMENT OF THE SYLLOGISM. (1901) (4)
- Colour and colour theories (4)
- THE PROBLEM OF COLOR. (3)
- Color Saturation and its Quantitative Relations. (3)
- Vision: Oscillations in the Retinal Process. (2)
- VII.—CTITICAL NOTICES (2)
- SCIENCE IN COMMON SCHOOLS. (1885) (2)
- Psychological Literature: Vision. (2)
- V.—SOME PROPOSED REFOEMS IN COMMON LOGIC (2)
- The new cases of total color blindness. (2)
- Discussions and reports: The color-vision of approaching sleep. (2)
- COLOR-BLINDNESS AND WILLIAM POLE: A STUDY IN LOGIC. (1897) (2)
- Professor Muller's theory of the light-sense. (2)
- The dissimilarity in function of the rods and the cones of the retina. (1)
- EBBINGHAUS'S THEORY OF COLOR-VISION. (1901) (1)
- On Theories of Light Sensation (1)
- THEORY OF COLOR SENSATION. (1893) (1)
- How Javal's keratometer may be easily changed into a good chromatometer for the examination of patients as to color-blindness. (1)
- Psychological literature: The perception of light and color. (0)
- AN OPTICAL ILLUSION. (1896) (0)
- PHOSPHORESCENCE IN DEEP-SEA ANIMALS. (1900) (0)
- PICTURES IN THREE DIMENSIONS. (0)
- Discussion: An ill-considered color theory. (0)
- DR. HILLEBRAND'S SYLLOGISTIC SCHEME (0)
- VII.—CRITICAL NOTICES (1890) (0)
- COLOR VISION. (0)
- Effect on the Persistence of Vision of Exposing the Eye to Light of Various Wave-Lengths. (0)
- DISCUSSION AND CORRESPONDENCE. (0)
- Discussion: The bearing of the after-image. (0)
- Discussions (1891) (0)
- The functions of the rods of the retina. (0)
- COLOR VISION. (1939) (0)
- Shadows of blood-vessels upon the retina. (0)
- AN UNKNOWN ORGAN OF SENSE. (1889) (0)
- Some Points in Minor Logic (0)
- MAGAZINE SCIENCE. (0)
- Color-sensation theory. (0)
- The extended Purkinje phenomenon (for gray lights). (0)
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