George Trumbull Ladd
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Most Influential Person Across History
American psychologist, educator and philosopher
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, George Trumbull Ladd was an American philosopher, educator and psychologist. Biography Early life and ancestors Ladd was born in Painesville, Ohio, on January 19, 1842, the son of Silas Trumbull Ladd and Elizabeth Williams.
George Trumbull Ladd's Published Works
Published Works
- Elements Of Physiological Psychology (123)
- President's address before the New York Meeting of the American Psychological Association. (52)
- Psychology as So-Called "Natural Science" (33)
- Elements of physiological psychology: A treatise of the activities and nature of the mind from the physical and experimental point of view (thoroughly revised and re-written). (23)
- The localization of cerebral function. (12)
- The formation of concepts. (11)
- Discussion: Is psychology a science? (1894) (11)
- Space and motion. (9)
- What Ought I To Do (8)
- Primer Of Psychology (8)
- The psychological view. (6)
- EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY IN AMERICA. (1895) (6)
- On certain hindrances to the progress of psychology in America. (1899) (5)
- Direct control of the retinal field. (1894) (5)
- In Korea with Marquis Ito (4)
- Legal Aspects of Hypnotism (1902) (4)
- THE TIME-RELATIONS OF MENTAL PHENOMENA. (4)
- The elements of the nervous system. (3)
- Japan in the Orient: II. Relations to China (2)
- Direct control of the 'retinal field': Report on three cases. (1903) (2)
- Mind and body. (2)
- Rudolf Hermann Lotze (1817-1881): Outlines of Psychology. (1)
- Economic and Social Changes in Korea (1)
- The Development of Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century. II (1905) (1)
- President’s Address (1896) (1)
- Psychology and the philosophy of mind. (1)
- Japan in the Orient: Part One: Korea (1)
- Reasoning and knowledge. (1)
- The annexation of Korea : an essay in "Benevolent assimilation" (1)
- Attention and discrimination. (1)
- The Philosophical Basis of Literature (1899) (1)
- Perception by the senses. (1)
- The mechanism of thought. (1)
- Consciousness and Evolution. (1896) (1)
- Force and causation. (1)
- The Divisions of Philosophy. (1)
- Utilitarianism in ethics. (1)
- Sensation--Complexes and local signs. (0)
- Emotions, sentiments, and desires. (0)
- The development of personality. (0)
- The implicates of knowledge. (0)
- Smell, taste, and touch. (0)
- Temperament and development. (0)
- The quality of sensations. (0)
- Gardens and garden parties. (0)
- Monism and dualism. (0)
- The Secret of Personality. (1918) (0)
- The principles of church polity : illustrated by an anarysis of modern congregationalism and applied to certain important ... southworth lectures delivered at Andover Theological Seminary in the years 1879-1881 (0)
- Perception by the senses (continued). (0)
- Conation and movement. (0)
- Elements of the nervous structure. (0)
- Feeling, as pleasure-pain. (0)
- Spheres of reality. (0)
- Virtues of feeling: Kindness, sympathy, etc. (0)
- Lecture XI. Congregationalism and foreign missions. (0)
- The moral self. (0)
- Ethical and æsthetical "momenta" of knowledge. (0)
- BRIEF CRITIQUE OF “PSYCHO-PHYSICAL PARALLELISM” (0)
- The cerebral hemispheres and their functions. (0)
- Feeling, emotion, and expressive movements. (0)
- Measure and quantity. (0)
- The summer school at Hakoné. (0)
- The ultimate moral ideal. (0)
- Connection of body and mind. (0)
- The ground of morality and the world-ground. (0)
- Hearing and sight. (0)
- Ikegami and Japanese Buddhism. (0)
- Sensation: Its quality and quantity. (0)
- The emotions and sentiments. (0)
- The consciousness of identity, and so-called double consciousness. (0)
- Outlines of Metaphysic, Portions of Lects (0)
- The person as moral. (0)
- Outlines of Æthetics, Portions of Lects (0)
- The Religious Consciousness as Ontological (0)
- The place of the nervous system in the animal kingdom. (0)
- The so-called "mental faculties" (0)
- Casuistry: Moral tact and conflict of duties. (0)
- Substance of the nervous substance. (0)
- Other ethical feelings. (0)
- An Answer by Prof. Ladd (1915) (0)
- Lecture IV. The principles of congregationalism applied to man as a citizen. (0)
- Analysis of moral consciousness. (0)
- The person as a lover of beauty. (0)
- End-organs, or receptors, of the nervous system. (0)
- Virtues of the will: Courage, temperance, etc. (0)
- The processes of ideation. (0)
- The representative image or "idea" (0)
- Forms and laws. (0)
- The mind as real being. (0)
- Morality and religion. (0)
- Experience and the transcendent. (0)
- Virtues of the judgment: Wisdom, justness, etc. (0)
- Sensory and motor functions of the cerebral hemispheres. (0)
- Origin and permanence of mind. (0)
- Knowledge of things and of self. (0)
- Analysis of the conception of reality. (0)
- Mental images and ideas. (0)
- Feelings and motions. (0)
- The Conference upon the Near East and Africa (0)
- Reality and unity of the mind. (0)
- A Year of "Benevolent Assimilation" (0)
- Impulse, instinct, and desire. (0)
- The feeling of obligation. (0)
- Coming to one's self. (0)
- A Theory Of Reality (0)
- Reflex functions of the nervous system. (0)
- Court functions and imperial audiences. (0)
- Gross structure of the nervous system. (0)
- Outlines of Logic and of Encyclopæia of Philosophy, Portions of Lects (0)
- The Development of Korea in Most Recent Times (0)
- Back Matter (1901) (0)
- Application of the forms of the concept. (0)
- Lecture VI. The principle of a regenerate membership. (0)
- Concerning the adducing of proof. (0)
- Presentations of sense, or sense-perceptions [continued]. (0)
- Development of the nervous system. (0)
- Lecture I. The principles of congregationalism. (0)
- The Ontological Problem of Psychology (1911) (0)
- The reality of mind. (0)
- The Biblical and the Philosophical Conception of God. III (0)
- The mind and its activities. (0)
- At the theatre. (0)
- Methods and divisions of ethics. (0)
- Reality as an actual harmony of the categories. (0)
- The quality of sensations [continued]. (0)
- The localization of cerebral function [continued]. (0)
- Knowledge of things and knowledge of self. (0)
- Faith as an hypothesis. (0)
- Mechanical theory of the nervous system. (0)
- The ultimate problem. (0)
- The person as religious. (0)
- Consciousness and attention. (0)
- Psychology, Descriptive and Explanatory: A Treatise of the Phenomena, Laws and Development of Human Mental Life. (1894) (0)
- Is Faith in God Decadent? (1912) (0)
- Hikoné and its patriot martyr. (0)
- Feelings, emotions, and movements. (0)
- The Mission of Philosophy (1905) (0)
- Combination of the nervous elements into a system. (0)
- The cerebral hemispheres and their functions [continued]. (0)
- Consciousness and self-consciousness. (0)
- Suggestions for the Questions of a Sunday-School Catechism. I.-III. (0)
- Psychology and Philosophy. (0)
- Physical basis of the higher faculties. (0)
- DR. CATTELL ON “ELEMENTS OF PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY”. (1888) (0)
- Knowledge and the absolute. (0)
- Hiro-mura, the home of "A Living God" (0)
- What is it to be a person? The witness of words. (0)
- Materialism and spiritualism. (0)
- Primary inference and judgment. (0)
- Introductory: History and Definition of the Term "Philosophy" (0)
- Method, sources, and division of psychology. (0)
- The principles of church polity, illustrated by an analysis of modern congregationalism and applied to certain important practical questions in the government of Christian churches. (0)
- The nerves as conductors. (0)
- Idealism and realism. (0)
- Lecture II. The principles of congregationalism applied to man as a rational soul. (0)
- Reflex and automatic nervous functions. (0)
- Substance of the nervous system. (0)
- The doctorine of the virtues as applied to business life : ten lectures on commercial ethics (0)
- The presentations of sense. (0)
- The process of thought in discovery. (0)
- Mind and body (continued). (0)
- Body and Mind (1879) (0)
- Consciousness, memory, and will. (0)
- I.—A DEFENCE OF IDEALISM (0)
- Real connection of brain and mind. (0)
- Consciousness and elementary self-consciousness. (0)
- History of opinion. (0)
- Lecture III. The principles of congregationalism applied to man as a social being. (0)
- Identity and difference. (0)
- The sphere and problem of ethics. (0)
- ETHICS AND THE LAW (1909) (0)
- On metaphysics; Its nature; Its method; And the propriety of it. (0)
- The actuality of the ideal. (0)
- General relations of body and mind. (0)
- Sensory and motor functions of the cerebral hemispheres--Continued. (0)
- The development of the nervous system in the individual. (0)
- The centre of personality. (0)
- The presentations of sense [continued]. (0)
- Prolegomena to an Argument for the Being of God (1903) (0)
- I.—RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM (0)
- Climbing Asama-yama. (0)
- What is it to be a person? The evidence of fact. (0)
- The goal of personal life. (0)
- Structure of the organs of sense and motion. (0)
- The quantity of sensations. (0)
- Lecture V. The formal principle of congregationalism. (0)
- General physiology of the nerves. (0)
- Nature and spirit. (0)
- Classification of the virtues. (0)
- Chemistry of the nervous system. (0)
- The unity of mind. (0)
- Space, time, and causation. (0)
- Lecture X. The self-propagation of congregationalism. (0)
- Knowledge as feeling and willing. (0)
- A Death Ceremonial of the "Kapola Bania" Caste (0)
- Degrees, limits, and kinds of knowledge. (0)
- Lecture XII. Present and prospective tendencies of congregationalism. (0)
- Feeling: Its nature and classes. (0)
- Age, sex, and temperament. (0)
- End-organs of the nervous system. (0)
- The development of the mind. (0)
- The faculties of the mind, and its unity. (0)
- Types and principles of mental development. (0)
- The Theory of Knowledge. (0)
- Introduction: Nature of physiological psychology. (0)
- Universality of moral principles. (0)
- Memory and the process of learning. (0)
- Sensation: Its nature and classes. (0)
- Philosophy of Nature and Philosophy of Mind. (0)
- Lecture VIII. The principle of the communion of churches. (0)
- Will and character. (0)
- The emotions and passions. (0)
- The conception of the good. (0)
- Consciousness . By Henry Rutgers Marshall, M.A., L.H.D. New York, The Macmillan Co. 1909. (1909) (0)
- Phenomenon and actuality. (0)
- Change and becoming. (0)
- Number and unity. (0)
- The Sources of Philosophy, and Its Problem. (0)
- Down the Katsura-gawa. (0)
- Legalism in ethics. (0)
- The development of the nervous mechanism. (0)
- Lecture VII. The principles of congregationalism applied to the purity of the ministry. (0)
- Psychology and the philosophy of mind (continued). (0)
- Memory and imagination. (0)
- Idealism in ethics. (0)
- Relation of Philosophy to the Particular Sciences. (0)
- Back Matter (1901) (0)
- The Spirit and the Method of Philosophy. (0)
- Presentations of sense, or sense-perceptions. (0)
- Particular beings and their qualities. (0)
- The unity of virtue. (0)
- America and Japan: (0)
- Present Religious Tendencies in India (1901) (0)
- Knowledge, Life and Reality (0)
- The concept of mind. (0)
- The teleology of knowledge. (0)
- Structure of the spinal cord and brain. (0)
- Definition and problem of psychology. (0)
- Duty and moral law. (0)
- The person as rational. (0)
- Thinking and knowing. (0)
- The ethical sciences. (0)
- Knowledge and reality. (0)
- Place of man's mind in nature. (0)
- Scepticism, agnosticism, and criticism. (0)
- Truth and error. (0)
- The nature of mind. (0)
- Certain statical relations of the body and mental phenomena. (0)
- The world and the absolute. (0)
- The good man. (0)
- Dogmatism, Scepticism, and Criticism. (0)
- Dualism and monism. (0)
- The person as religious (continued). (0)
- Automatic and reflex functions of the central organs. (0)
- Tendencies and Schools in Philosophy. (0)
- The knowledge of things and the knowledge of self. (0)
- History of opinion (continued). (0)
- Outlines of the Philosophy of Religion, Portions of Lects (0)
- Thought and language. (0)
- Visiting the Imperial Diet. (0)
- The No, or Japanese miracle-play. (0)
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