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History of Psychology
ALFRED H. FUCHS, editor
Bowdoin College
RAND B. EVANS, action editor East Carolina University
Johns Hopkins's
first professorship in philosophy: A critical pivot point in the history
of American psychology
CHRISTOPHER D. GREEN
York University
The first professorship in
philosophy at Johns Hopkins University was contested in the early 1880s
by two of the most prominent and influential scholars in America: Charles
Sanders Peirce and George Sylvester Morris. A third figure also vied for
the position, although he was much less well known at the time: Granville
Stanley Hall. Through a series of unexpected circumstances, Hall ultimately
won the professorship and then used it to leverage an extraordinary career
that included his opening the first American research laboratory in psychology,
establishing the American Journal of Psychology, becoming president
of Clark University, founding the American Psychological Association,
and profoundly affecting the character of developmental psychology in
America. |
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